The Rage of Achilles Hawkins's first novel,
The Rage of Achilles, is a
novelization of
Homer's
Iliad, told in modern and sometimes graphic language. Based on
Julian Jaynes's hypothesis of the development of consciousness and the breakdown of
bicameral mentality, it depicts the formation of the modern mind in the crucible of
Bronze Age warfare. "The vast majority of the characters in 'The Rage of Achilles' are highly susceptible to bicameral hallucinations. When faced with pressing challenges or cognitive dissonance, the gods 'speak to them' and even manifest visually. In keeping with Jaynes’s theory, these hallucinations are produced by the non-dominant hemisphere and perceived by the dominant voices from within the mind, wrapped in the trappings of an outer pantheon. Against this backdrop of hallucination-fueled men, a few characters are deaf to the voices of the gods. The Trojan prince Paris and the Ithacan hero Odysseus both experience the world with modern minds. Odysseus especially provides the reader with a sympathetic consciousness through which to understand these violent men and their alien thoughts. He's forced to nod and go along with the bicameral humans in his midst, unable to come clean about the divine silence in his head. At the same time, every diplomatic or strategic idea that he shares with the Achaeans is attributed to the goddess Athena speaking through him." It was published in 2009 by Casperian Books.
American Neolithic In his second novel, American Neolithic, Hawkins moves from the Homeric past to a
dystopian future. Set in a moving-target day after tomorrow, the United States has become a Police State Lite: Drones patrol the skies; the black-uniformed Homeland Police have exclusive jurisdiction over any matter touching on national security; the Patriot Amendments have rendered civil liberties nominal. Into this world comes the last literate member of the last surviving band of
Neanderthals, only to be caught up in a hip-hop murder and a courtroom confrontation with
scientific creationism, the state religion of what his cynical lawyer calls a "trailer park theocracy." Kirkus Reviews named it a Best Book of 2014, calling it "a towering work of speculative fiction." Rain Taxi described it as "a special novel; thematically rich, it also provides all the pleasures of a hard-boiled thriller. The unique premise and lovingly crafted characters will stay with you long after you’ve closed the book." ==References==