I thought Kurt Vonnegut’s novel Galapagos would be an interesting
read for my vacation in the Galapagos Islands in February. In a way it was, but not in the naturalist or
scientific genre one might think. If
there were a Nobel Prize for a Morbid Sense of Humor, Vonnegut would own it.
In his novel, a new luxury cruise ship will be launched from
Quayaquil (Ecuador) for an inaugural trip to the Galapagos islands. The
marketing for the ship has dubbed it the “Nature Cruise of the Century” and
proudly touts its initial passenger list which includes the likes of Jackie
Kennedy Onassis, Rudolf Nureyev, Henry Kissinger, and Mick Jagger. The book’s narrator is the ghost of a man who
died during the ship’s construction.
In the days before the ship is set to depart, a world
economic meltdown begins, with countries collapsing like dominoes. Hundreds of passengers, including all of the
celebrities, cancel their trips. By the
day of departure, only a handful of passengers have made their way to Quayaquil. Then, Ecuador joins the ranks of nations with
collapsed economies, and Peru takes that as an opportunity to invade. As the passengers (and 3 indigenous Ecuadorian
women) successfully fight their way through the city to the ship, their departure
becomes an escape, not a vacation cruise. On board, they head to sea on a damaged ship with an engine but limited fuel,
and a broken navigation system. Days
later they will shipwreck onto a (fictional) uninhabited island in the
Galapagos.
Meanwhile, a mysterious disease has broken out across the
globe, disrupting human ability to reproduce, and the world’s population dies-off. [Any similarities between this week’s Wall
Street stock market meltdown and the Coronavirus pandemic are purely
coincidental … one hopes.] The narrator
blames the “evolution of the human brain” as being responsible for the death of
life as we know it, noting the brain had become so large and specialized that
it no longer had any survival skills.
Spared from the mysterious disease, the handful of
passengers on the remote deserted island -- presumably with smaller brains -- will
re-populate the earth over the next millennium.
Recommendation:
Fun with bizarre, comical characters. Not a classic.