"I'm on my way back. I was one of the first they took away." So begins
Robert Kelly's remarkable science fiction novel about a literally
divided self. "I" is Billy, the book's protagonist, a boy who is
captured by a group of aliens who take him to a cave and meticulously,
if seemingly by caprice, remove his "young pure smokeless lungs" and
other internal organs to replace them with two gray squirrels, a live
hawk, a shoe, and a variety of other bizarre objects. Billy's body and
mind are spun off into a curious twin, one whose adventures Billy is
forced by his captors to watch and try to make sense of--not a simple
task when he sees his doppelgänger stealing everything from him: body,
name, family, his beloved Eileen. Complicating matters, and forcing
Billy deeper into his ironic journey of self, is a mysterious pamphlet
called "The Book from the Sky," written by what may be yet another
variation of Billy himself, Brother William. This stunningly imaginative
work, echoing the late novels of Iris Murdoch and the fantasies of
Robert Charles Wilson and Jonathan Stroud while remaining inimitably
Kelly's own, offers adventurous readers a "cabinet of wonders" not
unlike the body of his beleaguered young hero.