Brother to Demons, Brother to Gods begins with a genetic engineering program conceived by the Smithwicks, a family of "Creators" who first improve on inadequate Homo sap ("preman") with two laboratory species and then come up with the "stargods." These powerful Frankenstein fabrications, however, send the Creators chasing back to their labs in a last desperate attempt to undo the consequences of their folly. A thousand years later, two "preman" waifs, Davey and Bugler, find unsuspected powers genetically programmed into their minds and bodies, and realize that they are to be the parents of the liberating "ultiman."
John Stewart Williamson who wrote as Jack Williamson (and occasionally under the pseudonym Will Stewart) was a U.S. writer often referred to as the "Dean of Science Fiction".
This is a story set in multiple universes of a far future humanity/post-humanity. Through genetic engineering (a term which Williamson is credited with inventing), there are premen (people like us), trumen (genetically perfected humans), mumen (mutants specialized for space, or life on other worlds), stargods (telepathic immortals). There are also the mythical Fourth Creation, even more powerful beings whose genetic code is hidden within the remaining premen population. In this setting, two small children Davey Dunahoo and Buglet grow up on a premen reservation on Earth, and gradually become aware of their own status in the complicated human landscape. Despite the technological justification, the cultural milieu resembles fantasy writing, with nearly omnipotent gods wielding supernatural powers. Davey and Buglet’s survival is as much a matter of gaining the sympathy of powerful allies, as it is of developing their own agency.
This novel is a fix-up of five previously published novellas, mostly from Analog in the late 1970s. The parts are the following:
1. Stepson to Creation, first published in Analog January 1977 2. Slave to Chaos, first published in Galileo October 1977 3. Kinsman to Lizards, first published in Analog July 1978 4. Brother to Demons, first published in Analog August 1978 5. Brother to Gods, first published in Analog December 1978
It turns out I have previously read Brother to Gods in that December 1978 Analog, when it was new. Since I did not have the context of the prior four novellas at that time, it alone was not very satisfying. In this case, I now know the whole story, and found it to be entertaining but not that noteworthy.
A really cool concept dealing with genetic engineering of human beings. A nice, fictional read. Some parts are a bit difficult to picture because of the awkward descriptions from the author, but not too confusing! The book ties in Christian elements along with Greek mythology and twists the stories to create a novel idea of humans before gods.
When Gods are afraid of those they loathe, how will they react when they're faced with a more powerful deity? A fun, insightful read by Jack Williamson