Silvia Moreno-Garcia's latest offering is an extraordinary science fiction-historical fiction retelling of a classic, HG Wells The Island of Dr Moreau, Moreau is a vivisectionist, a story with its focus on ethics, monsters, religion, power and science. Here, the setting shifts to 19th century Mexico, with its sweltering heat in the southern Yucatan peninsula in the 1870s, echoing the original dark themes of a genius or deranged scientist's development of human-animal hybrids. The beautiful Carlota Moreau with her striking presence, grows up on a remote hacienda, plagued with fragility, her life overseen by her father, having the company of Ramona, the housekeeper, Lupe and Cachito. The melancholic British Montgomery Laughton, with his past trauma, is hired as Dr Moreau's assistant. Moreau's scientific experimental creations are being funded by a man with his own agenda, Hernando Lizalde, from Merida, with a son, Eduardo, who turns up at the hacienda.
Carlota is set to lose her naive innocence as she begins to ask questions, secrets that lie behind locked cabinets and padlocked doors are set to be revealed, what is the truth that lies behind her father? The author ventures into territory Wells never did, the turbulent history of the Yucatan and the caste war, exploring class, exploitation, the role and status of women, and colonialism. This is a richly atmospheric sensory delight of a disturbing and vibrant novel, unsettling, captivating and enthralling, with a romance, and its complex characters, asking what is it to be human, who exactly are the monsters and raising the issue of what limitations should be placed on science, given the potential horrors and dangers that could arise.
In many ways, this multilayed retelling improves on the original, I particularly enjoyed the development of Carlota into a strong and determined character. I have no hesitation in recommending this wonderful piece of sci-fi historical fiction highly. Many thanks to the publisher for an ARC.