Thursday , March 28 2024
Novel creates, but doesn't deeply explore, an afterlife where the dead are encouraged to reincarnate rather than stay in eternity,

Book Review: The Land of Later On by Anthony Weller

There are probably more visions of the afterlife than there are religions and cultures that believe in it. It is unlikely though that any other than Anthony Weller’s offer a choice between an eternal afterlife and reincarnation, albeit as an entirely different person.

In fact, in Weller’s The Land of Later On, the power(s) that be actually make sure each new arrival gets a guidebook. The underlying message of the book, though, is that life, so to speak, is better reincarnated than spent in eternity.

The Land of Later On is purportedly a book written by the protagonist, Kip, a New York City jazz pianist who returns from the afterlife after a suicide attempt prompted by a neurological disease that prevents him from playing music. He writes the book not to convince people there is life after death but to urge them to resist the guidebook’s ongoing encouragement to reincarnate once they arrive there.

The eternity Weller envisions is much like life on Earth but, with practice, people can transport themselves to almost any time and place. Still, it isn’t quite the same. For example, you won’t be able to meet or chat with Shakespeare, Mozart or any number of historical figures because they decided to be reincarnated. Likewise, you can’t attend a historic event because they happen only once and cannot be experienced again.

For Kip, though, the ability to go wherever and whenever he wants isn’t all that important. Once slightly acclimated, he spends his time searching for his girlfriend Lucy, who died of leukemia a couple years before his suicide attempt. The effort is daunting given that even if he picks the right place, he must also pick the right time. And the search will be inevitably fruitless if Lucy has already returned to life as a new and different person.

Kip is assisted in the search by poet Walt Whitman, who clearly has ulterior motives and is part of an underground cabal trying to convince those in the afterlife not to reincarnate. The search for Lucy takes Kip to several centuries and places, including a truck stop in Oklahoma, a coffee house in Istanbul, the Indian Himalayas and the Marquesas Islands. To a certain extent, The Land of Later On has echoes of author Philip José Farmer’s Riverworld series. Ultimately, though, the denouement of Kip’s efforts is somewhat anticlimactic.

While Weller deserves stars for his writing, his concept of life after death never quite reaches full fruition. We learn that while no god is present there, that doesn’t mean there aren’t one (or more) somewhere else. This is especially so as it is clear that someone or something is in control behind the scenes. Who, for example, makes sure each new arrival finds a copy of the guide? While perhaps a little esoteric, these issues are rendered rather extraneous by the concentration on Kip and Whitman jumping through time and space looking for Lucy. It also produces some minor inconsistencies. Thus, although Whitman explains why individuals are encouraged to leave and become reincarnated, it is unclear how he gained such knowledge given that he doesn’t seem to know the other whys and wherefores behind this afterlife.

Perhaps Weller avoided delving any deeper into the philosophical issues to keep the book from becoming too recondite. His approach also legitimately leaves readers to ponder whether the afterlife is real or just Kip’s near-death hallucination. Still, a closer examination and consideration of those concepts would have made for a more ingenious story.as many visions

About Tim Gebhart

After 30 years of practicing law to provide shelter for his family, books and dogs. Tim Gebhart is now perfecting the art of doing little more than reading, writing and sleeping.

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