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The Child Goddess by Louise Marley
pub: Ace. 324 page hardback. Price: $23.95 (US), $36.00 (CAN). ISBN: 0-441-01136-5

check out website: www.penguin.com


On a distant oceanic planet, a dark secret waits unaffected by time. The previously thought uninhabited planet of Virimund, with its vast oceans and small numerous volcanic islands, is a veritable paradise waiting to be explored.

The ExtraSolar Corporation aren't concerned with idyllic locales or shadowed histories. Their main concern is using the immense water source to produce hydro-power. All of a sudden, events unfold that lead to one of their Forcemen being killed - in an altercation with colonists, child colonists. The result of which is that one child is left injured, another dead like the Forceman who found them.


ESC call in the aid of a priest of the Order of Mary Magdelene, Mother Isabel Burke, who is a skilled and highly professional anthropologist. It is her job to assess the girl, named Oa, and make the first steps to communication a reality and eventually fulfilling the position of the girl's guardian.

Isabel Burke actually exceeds ESC's expectations, going beyond her brief to uncover the truth behind the descendants of a three-hundred year old colonisation of Virimund. In time, discovering why the child Oa is so desperate not to talk about the island of her banishment.

Louise Marley is primarily a classical singer, operatic stages are familiar territory for this lady, not unlike the deck of a space-cargo carrier. However, her writing career has taken off to a fabulous start and she has a wealth of books published to prove it. 'The Child Goddess', her seventh book to date, has an edginess about it that couldn't be further from the world of stage and sound.

It holds a deep resonating message as the story unfolds. Glimpsing past memories through the eyes of the child, Oa, and present trials beguiling Isabel Burke and her faith. This isn't a throw-away tale of long-haul journeys through space and an eventual alien nasty at the end. No. In fact, the plot becomes far more profound than that.

Marley conceives characters that are picture-perfect, their idiosyncrasies and the tangible link to reality that the story requires. Isabel Burke affects a strident but challenged woman to whom loss and sacrifice have always been a life choice until now. Her counterpoint being the girl-child, Oa. A marred soul in search of the light of hope wherever she can glean it. Her life dealing with ostracism from her people and ultimately her family is a constant reminder of her age and fragility. Yet the secret to her banishment and ultimately the secret of Virimund is thought-provoking and moving.

While the leads in this story were many, there can be only one wicked witch. Gretchen Boreson, the Administrator at the Seattle Multiplex is simply wretched. Her character is like a stab-wound to the spirit and from the beginning it cannot be said she has the child's best interests at heart.

The constant tug of morality, in its many forms within the book, is a stimulating change. Marley never holds back in her blatant dislike in the motivations of a medical professional seeing dollar signs above a human being's head. She deals with the situation of potentially human life without death, in a slightly religious but not indoctrinating tone.

The writing style, as can be seen by the page count of the book, was tightly written, leaving no place for padding out and over-analysis of character developments.

I loved this book. Unashamedly crying during several episodes of characters going through emotional anguish and joy. It stands out for its parallels to our lives here in this time and place, ultimately making me feel ashamed of mankind and its perpetual need to impact on nature for its own ends.

A good book, for questioning times.

Donna Jones


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