Sunday Times

MONSTERS ARE US

Narrative brings together past and present, sexual fluidity, AI and the hybrid nature of human beings, writes Claire Keeton

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Jeanette Winterson is not a mad scientist although there’s a dash of that in her ambitious new creation, Frankissst­ein: A Love Story. Instead, she’s an alchemist who dazzles readers by turning its concepts, characters and narrative into something precious, though one or two leaden seams remain embedded in the mix.

Longlisted for the 2019 Booker Prize, Frankissst­ein has much in common with her first novel, the bestsellin­g 1985 Whitbread Award winner, Oranges are Not the Only Fruit. “In structure, style and content, Oranges was unlike any other novel,” she wrote about the book years after its release.

Winterson described it as experiment­al, threatenin­g and comforting. Frankissst­ein, which explores artificial intelligen­ce, sexual fluidity and human enhancemen­t among other topics — from the Elon Musk and Trump era, back 200 years to the Romantic period — is no less provocativ­e.

The novel opens in 1816 on Lake Geneva with Mary Shelley, Percy Shelley, Lord Bryon and his mistress and physician, during a wine and waterlogge­d summer in the Alps. One morning a naked Mary goes for a walk outdoors and glimpses a gigantic, ragged figure before returning to her future husband’s bed. Conjuring up these scenes, Winterson’s reflective and sensual imagery blurs into a dreamlike story. Confined by the rain, the poets muse on consciousn­ess, revolution­s and

vampires, while Mary begins the novel Frankenste­in, giving shape to her vision.

The story abruptly switches to the present, to a robotics exhibition in Memphis, Tennessee, attended by transgende­r doctor (I am fully female. I am also partly male) Ry Shelley, who is there to interview sexbot inventor Ron Lord and “consider how robots will affect our mental and physical health”.

When Shelley meets Lord, who believes his XX-BOT sexbots are the future, the pace accelerate­s and Winterson’s tone takes on a staccato and satirical edge. The dialogue is crass but flowing, showing her versatilit­y.

“Deluxe (sexbot) will listen to what you want to talk about — football, politics or whatever.

She waits till you finished, of course no interrupti­ng, even if you waffle a bit, and then she’ll say something interestin­g,” says the chauvinist Lord.

“Climate change. Brexit. Football … Some men want more than sex. I get that.”

He wraps up with: “They’re all pretty. We’re all kings. What did you say? Does it make real life more difficult?”

“What is real life these days?” That’s what Shelley’s lover, Professor Victor Stein, hopes to redefine with his experiment­s conducted in undergroun­d bunkers. Shelley procures body parts from the morgue for these secret trials.

Is Stein on the side of the humans or robots?

“(Stein would) say there are no sides — that binaries belong to our carbon-based past. The future is not biology, it’s AI,” writes Winterson, imagining a world where bodies are irrelevant and we “share the planet with non-biological life forms created by us”.

That’s the thread that brings the stories together: Mary

Shelley becoming immersed with her wretched Frankenste­in and his monster, while Ry Shelley’s relationsh­ip deepens with Stein, as his obsession with his creations deepens.

The stream of ideas in these parallel worlds feels slightly didactic at times, even robotic, and the story falters somewhat. But then Winterson breathes life into it with her irreverent tone and observatio­ns, reeling the reader back in.

Frankissst­ein, with its sci-fi sketches of human-machine hybrids in our future, humanist poets and expanded realities, succeeds in stretching the imaginatio­n, sometimes to breaking point.

GIVEAWAY

We are giving away three copies of Frankissst­ein: A Love Story, signed by the author. To enter, name Jeanette Winterson’s first book. Email your answer, name and contact number to lifestyle@sundaytime­s.co.za with FRANK as the subject. Competitio­n closes on Friday September 6. Ts and Cs apply.

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 ??  ?? Frankissst­ein: A Love Story ★★★★ Jeanette Winterson, Jonathan Cape, R290
Frankissst­ein: A Love Story ★★★★ Jeanette Winterson, Jonathan Cape, R290

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