Hazards of Time Travel
Living in the dystopian world of the RNAS (Reconstituted North American States),
seventeen-year-old Adriane Strohl is descended upon by Homeland Security and arrested for
the traitorous curiousity in her eight-minute valedictorian speech, after which she is
promptly teletransported to Wainscotia University in 1959 Wisconsin—a.k.a. Zone
9—where she must live out four years of Exile as undergraduate coed “Mary Ellen
Enright.” Yes, really!—that’s the best use the Orwellian oligarchs in the year 2039
can think of for teletransporting people through time. Once ensconced in Wainscotia
Falls, Mary Ellen suffers a patchwork of freshman homesickness, a consuming crush on a
young psychology professor, an ever-present paranoia that would make
Philip K. Dick proud, and an ongoing internal social commentary
on 1959, the RNAS, and mid-20th century behavior psychology.
Through it all, Oates presents sufficient glimpses of a garden
variety dystopian world and social science fiction to classify her novel as science
fiction with YA leanings, although doing so ignores the first-person story’s ending
that places everything before it into question. For a take on this terminal ambiguity,
check out Paul Di Filippo’s insightful review at
Locus Magazine—but don’t say I didn’t warn you that after reading his
review, you’ll need to read the whole darn book over again.
— Michael Main
September 23, 1959! It could not be true—could it?
This was Zone 9—of course. This
was my Exile. I must accept my Exile, and I must adjust. Yet—
The horror swept over
me: this was eighty years into the past, and more. I had not yet been born. My parents
had not yet been born. There was no one in this world who loved me, no one who even knew
me. No one who would claim me. I was utterly alone.