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Hugo Nominee for Best Novel: The Windup Girl by Paolo Bacigalupi

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Hugo Nominee for Best Novel: The Windup Girl by Paolo Bacigalupi

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Hugo Nominee for Best Novel: The Windup Girl by Paolo Bacigalupi

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Published on July 18, 2010

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Paolo Bacigalupi is no stranger to the Hugos. He’s been nominated for various stories four out of the past five years, and at the moment, his book The Windup Girl is in the running for the Best Novel category. The Windup Girl has already distinguished itself in this year’s awards circuit: it’s won a Nebula and the Locus for Best First Novel, as well as the Compton Crook award. (All it needs now to round out the collection is a nice, shiny Hugo, don’t you think?)

I’ll make no secret of the fact that I’m a fan of Bacigalupi’s work. His short fiction is complex and he has a gift for creating atmospheric imagery: the same is doubly true of The Windup Girl. At novel length his skill doesn’t just flow from the page, it grabs the reader and ties them to the story until they hit the end. If you do manage to put it down for a break, you’ll probably spend that break thinking about what’s going to happen next.

The Windup Girl’s title is slightly misleading in the sense that it isn’t about just Emiko, the windup. Instead, it’s built out of many stories from many characters that tweak, alter, influence and act as catalysts for each other. It is only in the rapid, explosive finale that the multiple storylines converge. Bacigalupi tells the stories as separate and equally intriguing narratives, but at the same time, he deftly weaves them into one larger picture that tells a story of corruption, politics, terror, and evil of both the mundane and the grand sorts. The future of this novel is not one that we would want to come to pass (though some days it seems more likely than others).

The perfect narrative juggling is what makes the book a winner, in my opinion. Bacigalupi manages to tell several distinct stories, each from characters who perceive themselves as the hero of their own tale, with different backgrounds and places in the dueling and sabotaging factions. So, as a reader, you find yourself often woven into the lives of two people who would likely prefer to kill each other, or supporting internally opposite factions or ways of living. Even Anderson, arguably one of the “worst” people at heart, is sympathetic in a way. The fact that he manages to never paint any of these characters as one-dimensional or villainous is marvelous. The Windup Girl plays to my weakness for characters who are unlikable or deeply awful in some way, yet still manage to draw your attention and interest.

However, not all of the characters are terrible people—some are just flawed in creative ways. My favorite of the book’s storylines is arguably the Jaidee & Kanya narrative. Jaidee has the best interests of his country at heart, and he’s perhaps the only one who does, but he’s headstrong and violent in a way that gets him and the ones he loves into unfixable trouble. His death is a gut-punch because I genuinely kept expecting him to succeed with his attempts to find his wife and then, after being caught, to at least take his captor down with him—but Bacigalupi doesn’t do the thing you expect with his “hero” figure. He kills him. (Of course, his haunting of Kanya is sort of like not-dying, but still. It’s not the predictable choice and it makes the story that much stronger as a whole.)

Despite my glee and love, there have been criticisms of this book. Something that others have seen as a flaw is actually one of my favorite parts of the book: its ability to make you feel icky. The Windup Girl is an intense read, and not generally in the pleasant way—there were points, especially in Emiko’s chapters, where I had to put the book down for a brief moment. Bacigalupi never writes his violence, be it sexual or not, in a gratuitous way, but he also does not shy away from it. The world of this near-future Thailand is rough and horrible in many ways to its people and he is always truthful about the ugliness. Emiko suffers more than most, but if he had winced away from writing the scenes of her abuse and rape or softened them while still portraying the other character’s tribulations, it would have been worse, I think.

The disclaimer is that I actually like to be made uncomfortable and to be made to cry and to be upset by books. I want to care. I want to be drawn in and along with the people on the pages. The Windup Girl, even and perhaps because of its cruelest moments, is a work of genius that does this seemingly without effort.

I sincerely hope the later this year I get to hear Paolo Bacigalupi accept the Hugo award for this twisty, complex, beautiful and horrifying book.


Lee Mandelo is a multi-fandom geek with a special love for comics and queer literature. She can be found on Twitter and Livejournal.

About the Author

Lee Mandelo

Author

Lee Mandelo (he/him) is a writer, scholar, and sometimes-editor whose work focuses on queer and speculative fiction. His recent books include debut novel Summer Sons, a contemporary gay Southern gothic, as well as the novellas Feed Them Silence and The Woods All Black. Mandelo's short fiction, essays, and criticism can be read in publications including Tor.com/Reactor, Post45, Uncanny Magazine, and Capacious; he has also been a past nominee for various awards including the Lambda, Nebula, Goodreads Choice, and Hugo. He currently resides in Louisville and is a doctoral candidate at the University of Kentucky. Further information, interviews, and sundry little posts about current media he's enjoying can be found at leemandelo.com or @leemandelo on socials.
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Shannon Turlington
14 years ago

Normally, I don’t care for sexual violence against women in my fiction because I think it is often gratuitous and meant to be titillating. Not so here. In the scene that you refer to, I think that the shocking level of violence is necessary so that we understand and empathize with Emiko when she transforms herself — she couldn’t have gotten there if it hadn’t been for what happened to her. Great book! I hope it wins the Hugo.

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14 years ago

I liked The Windup Girl, but I don’t understand all the hype about it. Is it just slim awards slates this year? It was certainly well done, but I think I’ve read better. (Under Heaven and Galileo’s Dreams pop out after a quick look at a list of books I read this year — maybe they came out too early?)

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14 years ago

While I’ll agree that I found the story generally very engaging, and I really enjoyed the well-developed, realistic characters, there were two things that kept kicking me out the the story:

1) The ghosts. Bacigalupi explained that he included them to strengthen the cultural flavor of the story, but I don’t like fantasy suddenly showing up in my science fiction, unannounced. If it had been possible to rationalize the spirits as superstition, I might have been able to accept that, but it eventually became impossible to do so.

2) The complete lack of green and renewable energy sources. Bacigalupi’s explanation was that he pretty much ignored any present technology that got in the way of his storytelling. I’m sorry, but one of the most important things (at least for me) in science fiction (even alternate history, let alone something clearly set in the future), is for the reader to be able to comprehend how things came to be the way they are. When present technologies vanish in the future, I want at least a token explanation.

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B_Munro
14 years ago

Don’t mind ghosts in my SF myself – IIRC they show up a few times in Clifford Simak – but I do dislike internally inconsistent, in fact _deliberately_ inconsistent world-building, in what is supposed to be a near-term future. At the very least the author can have the good grace to laugh and point at those of his readers who keep calling it “realistic.”

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14 years ago

The characters were indeed well done, and the world was very cool (though I also wondered about green/nuclear power), but the plot just seemed to crash at the end; I think the book would have benefited greatly from another 10-20 pages.

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14 years ago

After reading many rave reviews, I read the book. The first few chapters pulled me in, and it was going along great…but at some point it lost me.

It seemed to be a great idea, that lost focus, or maybe I really misidentified what the focus was supposed to be at the beginning.

So, my opinion of the book ended up as “Meh”…

But, I have little doubt that it is a shoe-in to win the Hugo.

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14 years ago

RE: Ghosts

I’ve read good SF/Fantasy, and this isn’t it. Maybe it’s just another element of the sloppy world-building, more than anything else. We get a (at least surface) consistent “This is our world, where X happened”, and then suddenly “Oh, and ghosts are real.” Not, “This is a world where ghosts are real and this happened.”

Maybe it’s just my skeptical nature. If you start out in what is clearly setup as my future, then do something to get me to ghosts, because they ain’t here now.