Tongues of the Moon by Philip Jose Farmer
This is a weird book for me to write about. I need to be writing and reviewing more Philip Jose Farmer in general; he is a classic author, whose award-winning Riverworld books are important works. His 50s classic The Lovers was groundbreaking for the portrayal of sex in genre fiction. He is important, so why did I randomly decide to read and review one of his lost novels from the early 60s.
For one thing, this is randomly the first Farmer book I bought. In the 90s, at a used bookstore in Syracuse, A city he lived in from 1956-58, before moving to Arizona. I picked up this paperback, and it has moved around with me, unread. A few weeks back, I was staring at my books and thought I finally needed to read that one. He likely lived in Arizona when he wrote Tongues of the Moon, but just three years after living in Cuse.
The Farmer family moved to Syracuse, New York to a house on Evaleen Street, and Phil worked as a technical writer for General Electric. That doesn’t matter, but as someone who lived in Syracuse, I was interested.
Tongues of the Moon is not considered a major work like The Lovers or Riverworld. Personally, my favorite PJF novel that I have read so far is the Alternate history novel Two Hawks from Earth. You will not find many long, detailed reviews of this novel, and so I suppose that is one reason I feel compelled to do that. Like many authors of the era, I have read mostly the classics. The authors like PKD, Malzberg and Brunner had super high moments and comically silly moments. Reading their whole catalog teaches you a thing or two about them. I don't have time to read all Farmer, but reaching this little lost gem was insightful and better than I expected.
All the elements that make it a gem are entirely based on the ideas. Farmer has written good books, but the prose and characters are super thin. There is a lack of defined structure, leading to long chapters that ignore natural breaks. The characters are thin and hard to remember. That being said, as a work of cold war speculation, it is both wildly out of date and fascinating in its implications. While Farmer wrote better SF before and after, this novel is almost more fun before of the weak parts.
This novel takes place in a future somewhat far ahead, but not pinned down to a year or a concept of exactly when. The Soviet Union and nations as we know them still exist, and the space race has evolved into various colonies. Throughout the solar system, it has gone on long enough that Mars. Well, the United States and Canada fell to Soviet control.
“America had fallen prey more to its own softness and confusion than to the machinations of the Soviets. Then, in the turbulent, bloody, starving years that followed the fall with their purges, uprisings, savage repressions, mass transportations to Siberia and other areas, importation of other nationalities to create division, and bludgeoning propaganda and re-education, only the strong and the intelligent survived.”
In hindsight, this speculation seems silly, but this was 1961, and hidden in the world-building is an alt-history Red Dawn that the Wolverines did even worse. There are lots of tiny but important details about the various nations, including feared now independent former colonies on Mars, although they are talked about so vaguely, I thought they were actual Martians for a minute.
The defense against Mars colonists becomes a specter that drives the advancement of the story like the Cold War, pushing progress. The drive of the narrative is a destructive nuclear war that destroys most of Earth. Our story is focused on a small number of colonists on the moon. They are suddenly the only survivors left. The driver of the suspense is the small groups from different cultures realizing their only hope is to work together.
“Unfortunately, there are other matters to be cleared up before we can discuss that. The main thing is, which base is the leader?”
A leader is one thing, but it becomes a matter of agreement to follow one culture and one language. Each of the cultures argues for its language and culture. Of course believes it should survive. Being the one agreed-upon language of the moon is the center of debate.
“Remember, the situation is not the same here as it was on Earth. There, even a secondary tongue had many speakers to hand it to children.”
There is an excellent version of this story to be had; the execution leaves much to be desired. Still, as an SF concept, it is there. So the title of the book comes from the expert who decides it is time to create a blended language.
Tongues of the Moon started life as a high-concept novelette. The story didn’t really have the room to expand the ideas, and the novel didn’t do much to expand them. There are moments of genius, but if this was the only Farmer I ever read I would not have believed he had classics in him. I am glad I read it, but I would not be quick to assign or suggest to anyone. It is interesting but certainly not canon.



