David Ira Cleary’s “Dr. Abernathy’s Dream Theater”

David Ira Cleary’s “Dr. Abernathy’s Dream Theater” is a fun short story that borrows stylistically from the proto-SF of Wells and other nineteenth century authors, and thematically from steampunk SF.

The story’s narrator is a drug addicted former professor by the name of Dr. Jaromir Stavan who lives in an alternate world reminiscent of the late nineteenth century with a dash of early twentieth century automobiles. Stavan, through chance, is introduced to the title’s Dr. Abernathy and his Dream Theater, where a special apparatus allows for the improvisational reproduction of one’s dreams by actors. In the background of the story, there is a rivalry between a Dr. Orestel and Dr. Abernathy. These competitors in the realm of psychology and dream interpretation make me think of later comparisons of Freud and Jung (including exile from their homeland and the oppressive “Revolutionary Council,” which sounds a lot like Nazi German in the context of the story). Dr. Abernathy shares an fascinating insight into his line of work:

We are cartographers, Stavan. We explore the world of dreams, find its landmarks, boundaries, its cities and its empty spaces (48).

Stavan reports that:

The Dream Theater brings to center stage our internal dramas, where they can be recorded by independent observers and then scrutinized beneath the arc-lamps of objectivity (51).

The Dream Theater is a fascinating technological invention for the story. Like Ted Chiang, Cleary constructs a logical explanation for the way the invention works in his alternate world despite its conflict with our world. The author’s invoking the language of science is necessary to bridge the story to our understanding of the universe as well as report on the continual breaking down of objectivity in a post-quantum theory reality. Clearly, the world of the story is disconnected from ours. Therefore, the rules and universal laws may be different.

This is an enjoyable story with a twist or two that makes it a joy to read. I recommend you check it out in Interzone #210.