Another hermaphrodite race, the Merculians, by Caro Sole
Book Review: The Abulon Dance by Caro Soles
by John C. Snider
The Abulon Dance is the first SF novel by Canadian writer Caro Soles, a Canadian college professor best known for her gay short fiction, which has been published in anthologies and magazines.
The tale begins when a dance troupe of Merculians (an effeminate, artistic race of humanoid hermaphrodites) arrives on the planet Abulon as part of a diplomatic cultural mission from the Inter-Planetary Alliance. Among the troupe are Triani, an incredibly talented but spiteful prima donna; Cham, the junior-most member of the troupe and Triani's lover; and Eulio, another accomplished dancer who is the partner of Beny, the I.P.A. Ambassador to Abulon. Other members of the diplomatic corps include Thar-von and Talassa-ran, bureaucratic representatives of the Serpian race (tall, blue-skinned creatures who are physically stronger and mentally more level-headed than the Merculians - and sworn to celibacy, a task made difficult by the Merculians openly promiscuous sexuality). Together, the Merculians and Serpians must determine if Abulon should be admitted into the I.P.A.
Once on Abulon, the aliens encounter a succession of mysteries. The Abulonians are surprisingly anachronistic - on the one hand they appear primitive, violent, and patriarchal; on the other hand they exhibit incredibly advanced technology, including intelligent android servants and electronically-enhanced watchdogs. Cultures clash as the Merculians must adjust to the strange ways of Abulon, and soon the situation is complicated by the abduction of Cham and the revelation that there is a powerful insurgent movement which seeks to unseat the Great Chief (the planetary ruler). When the Chief refuses to negotiate with the abductors, Triani and Eulio, along with an Abulonian prince named Luan (the homosexual son of the Great Chief who has become infatuated with the Merculians), set out on a secret mission to rescue Cham.
The Abulon Dance is a far cry from the chauvinistic boy-saves-girl formula that inhabits many SF novels even today. Ms. Soles has created an fascinating and complex world, and forces us to think about the issues of sexual lifestyle debated in modern society. The Merculians are intriguing, often annoying and downright uninspiring as protagonists, but the reader will still find himself/herself wanting to jump ahead to see where the next plot twist will take things.
A sequel - or rather, prequel - tentatively entitled The Danger Dance, appeared in 2002. The Abulon Dance hints at some intriguing events in the characters' pasts (and makes veiled references to Terra), so it will be interesting to see where this new and unorthodox SF series will take us."
An interesting variation, after Sturgeon's LEDOM, Le Guin's Gethenians and Storm's Wraeththu!