Visions of the Mutant Rain Forest: By Robert
Frazier and Bruce Boston: Crystal Lake Publishing, 2017, 245 pages.
In
an undefined future, the rain forest has taken on a grotesquely beautiful life.
It and everything in it mutates wildly, incessantly. The only laws governing
the changes appear to be chaos and rage. Some humans survive at the jungle’s ever
hungry and expanding frontier; their existence is precarious. The people who
live within the forest itself are no longer human. Perhaps they are more, perhaps less. The cities
fight back with flame and chemical warfare. The forest attacks with spores and
vines and strange beasts. In the end, everything succumbs.
In
this thick and meaty work, the reader will find poems, flash fiction, and even
a few longer stories. Many of these have appeared in other publications but
there are also a number of new pieces. Boston and Frazier appear to have been
writing of the mutant rain forest for quite a few years, and I’m glad to see
this material collected together in one place by Crystal Lake Publishing. It
certainly heightens and reinforces the impact of the individual pieces.
I’m
very familiar with Bruce Boston’s work, less so with that of Robert Frazier.
However, I thought the vision of these two writers meshed wonderfully
throughout the collection. As I started
reading, I was paying attention to which particular author did what. I soon stopped
concerning myself with that as I got further immersed in the world. It didn’t
matter any longer.
The
greatest strengths here are word play, imagery, and resonance. Maybe word ‘play’
isn’t quite the right term, for the language is serious. Word “work” might be
better. Others have remarked on the imagery as apocalyptic and hallucinatory. I
concur. But there’s a bit more. The imagery is itself insidious—not in a
negative sense but in the sense of entrapping and beguiling. It’s almost as if
the spores of the mutant rain forest wash over you with every page you turn.
You wonder if they might take root on your skin. What might be born from such a
symbiosis? And there you have the resonance.