Not Less Than Gods by Kage Baker


Not Less Than Gods
Kage Baker
Tor, 2010
U.S. first edition
ISBN 978-0-7653-1891-6
320 pages; $25.99

Fans of The Company novels of Kage Baker – the series that began with In the Garden of Iden and features the redoubtable Mendoza, along with other immortals and secret societies – need to know no more than that this novel comprises the back story of Edward Alton Fairfax-Bell.

Okay, now that they’re gone – because they’ve all just switched over to their favorite book site to buy Not Less Than Gods – I can tell the rest of you that Edward Alton Fairfax-Bell is a foundling, the bastard son of noble parents who had a tryst in 1924. He was adopted as an infant by a family suffering from the loss of their own infant son, but rejected by his adoptive mother, and therefore essentially raised by servants. At the age of 11, he is taken under the care of Dr. Nennys, the headmaster of a boarding school to which he is quickly ushered. He does well, grows to a very tall manhood (just shy of seven feet, in fact), and joins the Navy. Unfortunately, the Navy doesn’t quite meet his ideals, but is full of bounders and scoundrels – one of whom Edward nearly kills in 1847 when the man, his commanding officer, flogs a sailor nearly to death. Edward is locked up, and soon to be hanged, when Dr. Nennys comes to rescue him and set him up in his true profession.

Edward is to join a secret society that is working for the betterment of the world behind the scenes, manipulating leaders, planning wars, and using science far in advance of its time to accomplish these ends. Dr. Nennys describes the society as the most glorious gathering of men: “And so they came together, these good and wise men, and formed a society to work in secret for the improvement of the world. Once Science, they felt, could alleviate human suffering by developing advances in medicine, in agriculture, in sanitation. Only a hierarchy of great intellects should guide and rule mankind.”

Edward is eager for the work. He quickly proves to have abilities greater than the normal run of men; he can smell, hear and see better than they can, and his bones seem to be abnormally dense and therefore resistant to injury. He also has an unusual ability to persuade. It makes him a perfect spy, but he doesn’t much like his differences, feeling that they set him apart. Still, he gives himself wholeheartedly to the work, and, in 1850, is set his first real task.

History scholars will recognize the date: 1850 is just one year before Louis-Napoleon will attempt to stage a coup d’etat and assume dictatorship of France. It is the task of Edward and his team to prepare England for their joinder with France in a war against Russia by gathering information about military sites and armaments.

Baker takes Edward through a series of remarkable adventures in the remainder of the book, and especially shows us Edward’s coming into himself as a member of the secret society he serves. He learns little or nothing about the Company, but he does start to wonder about Dr. Nennys, who doesn’t seem to have aged a single day since he first retrieved Edward from his adoptive parents’ home several decades ago; indeed, rumor has it that Dr. Nennys has been a member of his gentlemen’s club for over 100 years. Instead, we see Edward growing into the person who meets Mendoza in Mendoza in Hollywood. I’ve always felt he was the most interesting of the three incarnations of the man Mendoza loves, so reading his story was a genuine pleasure.

The book is also full of wonderful, other-worldly or ahead-of-its-time technology. It’s difficult to call this steampunk, exactly, as one of the key pieces of technology is remarkable specifically because it doesn’t use steam, but (apparently) electricity. But those who enjoy that sort of book will likely take great pleasure in reading about transmitters years before miniaturization and transistors took hold in the real world.

I strongly recommend that anyone not familiar with the Company not start reading Kage Baker’s most expansive, multi-volume work with this novel. Much happens that those unfamiliar with Baker’s previous novels and stories will simply not understand. While that might not ultimately make this book a less interesting read, especially for steampunk fans, it will mean that the experience isn’t complete. I do recommend The Company novels overall, but would recommend that the reader start at the beginning, with In the Garden of Iden, and read the books in order from that point forward. (You actually might want to skip Mendoza in Hollywood , which is the weakest of all of Baker’s novels.)

Baker clearly was attempting to tie up loose ends in the Company saga, and she certainly managed to do that with Not Less Than Gods. This book reminds us what a loss we’ve suffered in Baker’s untimely death this past January. She’s left us a great piece of sheer fun in this novel.

Lewis's Novel?

I had to laugh while I was reading this, because of course it's the novel that the immortal Lewis was writing in Graveyard Games! I agree that of the three "incarnations of the Hero," Edward is the most interesting.

I'm actually having some trouble with the Company novels, but this one looks worthwhile. What I love best about Baker is her mix of seriousness, satire and humor--how, for example, the true villains in Life of the World to Come can also be complete buffoons.

Marion

Missed that

Good catch, Marion -- I completely missed that this was the novel Lewis was writing. Lewis was always one of my favorites (probably because he was in charge of collecting literature) and I would have loved to read a book completely about him.

Rude Mechanicals

I just ordered this one. Lewis figures prominately in it, I think, but I'm sure he's still just a sidekick to the wily Joseph.

Marion

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