Everyone knows the phrase “down the rabbit hole.” It's an Alice in Wonderland reference, where the main character is in their normal, everyday life one moment, then in someplace utterly insane the next. Reality is utterly, totally, and completely different.
However, the rabbit hole wasn’t good enough for John C. Wright’s Somewhither. No.
Somewhither needed an inter-dimensional portal that opens up to an invading army, sucking our hero into a realm that makes Wonderland look positively friendly and harmless.
The Story
Ilya Muromets is going to save the mad scientist's beautiful daughter. With his grandfather's sword girded on, his squirrel gun, and his father's crucifix, Ilya races to save the girl, and, incidentally, the world. This would be odd, but his father is often away on missionary work that involves silver bullets, sacred lances, and black helicopters.
One night, Professor Dreadful sends a warning to Ilya that his Many Worlds theory correct, but that his experiments have opened a door that should have remained closed, and his beautiful daughter, Penny, is in trouble.
I loved this book. It was so delightfully insane, and so marvelously put together. I enjoyed it from the first page. Especially as our hero narrates that this was all for a girl named Penny Dreadful.
.... Yes. He went there. It doesn't even stop there. If you folks think my writing is proof that I'm a smartass, you have got to read Somewhither. And this is just page one. Which includes the line "If you blame the damsel in distress, you are not the hero."
The opening chapters may be a little slow to people who are not nerds. But you're reading a book that's one part scifi and one part fantasy. If you are not nerdy enough to enjoy Wright's conversation about the how's and why's (and why nots) of branching timelines and alternate universes, why are you even reading this review?
But this is John C. Wright. He can probably describe paint drying in an entertaining fashion. Especially when he describes one incident with the supercollider as "let's just say over a dozen scientists, staff members, and visitors were electrocuted, microwaved, and Hiroshima'd."
I told you he could make anything entertaining.
And the lovely little dissertations along the way are charming, and so un-PC, it's delightful. There's a conversation on lovely damsels. Or getting two halves of the brain arguing with each other lest they gang up on the hero to stop him from heroics. (The note I made on points like this is "Remember when Peter David was funny? Pepperidge farm remembers.")
After Ilya falls into another world, and the plot gets off to a running start, one of the running gags throughout the novel involves language. Let's just say that I think that if John C. Wright wrote Lord of the Rings, he would have sentence diagrammed elvish.
Once we get to meet the villains, they are delightfully evil pricks. In a world where astrology is an accurate science, and fate is everything, even some of the men running the evil empire are trapped. It strikes me very much like the Persian empire -- "freedom" wasn't even a word in the language. It's not in this language, either. Neither is "right and wrong." Funny that. They are so unambiguously evil, even the narrator points out
“On principle, I was not helping any group that called itself The Darkest Tower against places called the Great Golden City and Land of Light. That was a no-brainer. I mean, get serious. Suppose you were from another world and came to ours circa 1940 and you saw an SS officer in his black uniform with the silver skulls on his collar, and he said he wanted to exterminate some folks called The Chosen People from some place called The Holy Land, who would you think the bad guy was?”
Despite how obviously evil the adversaries are, they are not shallow evil. There is a bit reminiscent of Sam and Frodo being Shanghaied by orcs -- Ilya is given a tour of The Tower by a creature that even Richard Sharpe would have identified as a Sergeant just by his banter. In it, we get a perfect picture of a Screwtape bureaucracy where Ilya concludes that the empire "is all full of bureaucrats and lawyers? This place is hell."
Also, there is a lot of casual bits of humor scattered throughout. Such as the misattributions ("There is an old saying: if you want peace, prepare for war. I think it is in the Bible or something."). And the little shots scattered throughout this novel are so much fun to behold. There's the "Professor Dreadful" referred to in the blurb, who is a "Harvard trained symbologist" (to which Ilya's father replies, "Amazing what they give degrees in these days.") And the Templars are the good guys. (Dan Brown felt that one,) The bad guys of the piece are from The Dark Tower. And all of the evil sorcerers carry golden compasses (snicker). Some of the warnings of prophecy are right out of Lovecraft. When Ilya hears that someone is a ringbearer, he says, "You mean like at a wedding? Or do you mean like Sam Gamgee carrying Albrecht's ring when it got too heavy for Tom Covenant?"
Even the casual comments about other timelines are entertaining ("Dude, my planet is run by Prussians .... You need paperwork to get permission to go to the outhouse.")
Then there's the bit that compared Fantasy Island to The Tempest. I feel like Wright has a lot of stuff in his head and it's all stacked on top of each other.
And I swear the entire building of the final team is a reference to the X-Men, only interesting and without the angst.
The Characters
There's even an entire conversation between Ilya and his father ... during which you realize that things aren't all that normal with this family ("Now Ilya, you've known that since you were twelve, when we taught you quantum mechanics." Huh?). The punchline of this conversation ends with one of the most awesome reveals that I've seen in a while, and more or less backhands Stephen Pinker into next Tuesday, casually and easily, in one paragraph.
By the end, our heroes are all very vivid. The team consists of an unkillable killing Machine, a wind manipulator called a “Cloud Walker,” a ninja, a Norse Shadow meets Moon Knight, the monster that chased Bugs Bunny and Captain Nemo. And there’s at least one reference to Lady Hawk.
Though I’m relatively certain that Wright was going for a D&D campaign given how often he comments on character classes.
The World
Illya starts in our world, an then the multi-dimensional rabbit hole kicks in, and then we’re off to the races. Not only has Wright decided to build one one, he’s built at least a dozen, but probably more than three dozen.
The Politics
None. Seriously, none. You’d need to do a lot of mental yoga to twist yourself into being pissy over this book.
Content Warning
There is a large section where it feels like the book drifts into torture porn. Our hero tries multiple escape attempts, and fails horribly. If I didn't know better, I would swear that Wright was a fan of Hellraiser. I recommend skimming those sections.
Why Read It?
If I were to sum up this book in one phrase, it would be “Anime Narnia.” Thus, it would have a ton more action, epic fantasy, and make most of the golden era pulps look slow. Yes, there is a slow part here, but that's mostly a horror element.
Honestly, you should be reading this book already.
I love this book (actually a very long omnibus edition of several books, which does not include the last published one) and this is a fantastic review. My only caveat is the content warning -- to me, the part where a character describes the torture and death of her mother is FAR worse than the longer scene you refer to, and it's why I don't recommend this book I love so much to young teen boys, who otherwise ought to love it too. Far be it from me to edit The Master--and let me hasten to add that all the things referred to here are GOOD writing and do fit the plot--but if I'd been a beta reader I would have said that scene was absolutely too much for the audience and the part you refer to is almost and perhaps for some over the line.
Otherwise this is an amazing, fun romp with incredible world-building (HOW did he manage all the names in... what is that? Ancient Babylonian?) and depth, a really great main character and lots of great side characters, and a story you want to keep reading. It not only holds up to repeat readings, it demands them, because there's just so much to digest. Just ONE of the themes, for instance, is "what would the world be like if every action was known in advance?" Another is "If reality had been split into alternate dimensions like the peoples of the Earth were split into countries and cutures in the story of Babel, isnt' the right thing to put it back together again -- and isn't every oppression justified in order to do it?"