The Year of the Quiet Sun

Wilson Tucker
The Year of the Quiet Sun Cover

The Year of the Quiet Sun

BigEnk
11/21/2024
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Some important context for The Year of the Quiet Sun is that the author, Wilson Tucker, was primarily a fan of the SF genre during the 1950's through the 1970's. He ran some clubs and was generally involved in the early scene. This novel is his most well known work, and he didn't produce much else, though one of his others works also was published in the first run of Ace science fictions specials. Why I point all of this out is that my main sticking point with The Year of the Quiet Sun is that it doesn't feel like it was written with an experienced hand. The quality is mixed at best, and even if the time travel element is interesting, I don't know that the writing itself is good enough to make this a super worth while read. It very much reads like higher quality fan fiction. 

In terms of plot, we follow an anthropologist named Brian Chaney who recently uncovered and translated several ancient scrolls near Jerusalem that he believes points to the bible being a work of fiction. Because of this work, and another previous work of his that predicts the events of the near future, he is selected for a secret government team of men to test and use a recently developed time machine. First they are sent only 2 years ahead to see if the current president gets elected, and then they are sent 20 years forward to see if Chaney's predictions are true. This is set against the backdrop of a slightly embellished version of a 1970's United States, where racial tensions are high, and there is the looming threat of war with the USSR, China, and a brewing conflict in the Middle East. He mentions Ronald Reagan (though not by name), and envisions a future US in which cronyism and corruption lead us to an apocalyptic demise. 

For some odd reason, Tucker writes a lot of the dialogue like he's writing a stage play with directions, starting lines of dialogue with an emotion or name of the charter followed by a colon and then the words they speak. It's comically lazy at worst, and a stylistic choice that makes for bad writing at best. Tucker also has the classic lecherous writing of women, as two of the time travel group consistently fawn over the director of the program. Tucker is pretty flippant about this, detouring from the action of the plot to mention some physical attribute of hers for no reason other than to be horny. This also speaks to the poor editing of the novel. Large passages of the text could've been removed without a tangible effect to the book, especially during the bloated and slow first half, in which there is no time traveling at all. 

The second half of the book, which focuses completely on the three men venturing 20+ years into the future is much more readable and interesting. If the whole book had been like that it would be much improved. The paradox involved with time traveling, and the constraints of the vehicle itself were fun to think about. I also like getting the perspective of all three men sequentially as they went forward in time. It's just such a bummer that Tucker doesn't get around to any of this until he wasted my time with the first 100+ pages, because it's not like that time was spent making realistic characters or developing interesting themes. 

I find it hard to get rid of a book with this cool of cover art (I'm a sucker for this era of Ace Science Fiction Special), but jeez, I can't really see myself reading it ever again despite the much improved second half of the novel. It's teetering on the edge of getting voted off the island.