Brutal, harrowing, and an incredible film that plumbs the depths of violence, despair, and friendship. (Spoiler free)
I read The Long Walk novel a few months ago in anticipation of the movie coming out, so I knew what I was getting into with this. But seeing it the same week in America that multiple acts of gun violence were committed, it was hard. Really hard. I considered rescheduling, actually, given that I wasn't sure I could handle even more violence on screen.
The film revolves around a dystopian battle royale-type contest: Young adults in an alternate America volunteer for the Long Walk and are drawn by lottery to participate. The last man still walking takes away the prize — untold riches and whatever your heart wishes. If you stop walking below 3 m.p.h., however, you're shot after three warnings by a slowly moving military vehicle that has rifles trained on everyone.
So, yes, it's like The Hunger Games and Squid Game, in that young people are forced to outlast each other to the death in the face of unspeakable fear and callous violence. But both of those movies feel more removed from our current-day environment, while The Long Walk seems much more realistic in that there's no futuristic capital city, no high-tech arena with sponsored gifts.
The main characters are walking on screen for the entirety of the film, and as the miles pile up, you can feel their exhaustion, dread, and fear. The first half-marathon's length doesn't seem so bad. Just a long walk, right? But there's no stopping. For anything. Watching the participants begin to stumble is gut-wrenching. When one character gets diarrhea, you see it happen in real time, along with what happens to him when he can't recover. The first death is incredibly graphic, and that's on purpose. I saw in an interview that Stephen King mentioned that he had one condition for making the movie: The deaths had to be shown. Why? To make sure that the audience knew that this wasn't just entertainment, and to show the pointless, absurd violence of the march. After that first death scene, I started looking away. It was too hard for me to watch again and again.
As night begins to fall on the first day, you start physically feeling the tiredness and exhaustion of the young men. No matter what, you can't stop, even if your shoe starts filling up with blood from blisters or you twist your ankle. The fear of being brutally shot reverberates through their young bodies as they march on. Sleep is stolen in small bits while hanging on to the person next to you. Every moment, you're reminded that you will either win the entire thing or you will die. There is no other option. There is no second place.
What prevents The Long Walk from just being torture porn, however, is the incredible performances of the actors who are along for the journey. Much like the bonds and alliances that are made in The Hunger Games, the friendships in this film are its heart, and they're truly impressive. In between moments of heart-shattering violence and long-distance-induced body horror injuries, you have a core group of characters that are slowly but surely making their sacrifices count. When they're not running for their lives, they're talking, laughing, and trying to make sense of the world and how they got to be on the Long Walk. Every few minutes, they experience trauma after trauma as they watch their companions fall. Similarly, every few minutes, I would think about how tired they are, how in pain they must be. Imagine walking as far as you'd ever walked before, then having to keep walking indefinitely or else face death.
Ray Garraty and Peter McVries, our two main characters, quickly become fast friends while walking, and their relationship is truly touching to watch as they traverse hundreds of miles across rural Maine backroads.
When I mentioned earlier that consuming this movie is hard, I wasn't joking. I'm not sure what to take away from it. The message that violence is wrong is very clear. But I think what I'll take away personally from it is the power of support during periods of intense, overwhelming fear. You're with these characters in essentially a locked room (except the room is always a small piece of tarmac), faced with the certainty that all but one will die. No matter how it ends, it's going to be tragic for nearly everyone.
I always thought the folks who go on reality shows and say "I'm not here to make friends" were being silly. Of course you're not, you're there to win money. But on theLong Walk, despite offering untold riches, it practically demands friendship to ignite. Why? Because their humanity is at stake. These are young men scared out of their minds, and the other kids aren't the enemy. The enemy is a dystopian system that made them think they had no other choice at a future than to participate in a state-sanctioned murder lottery game. Stephen King wrote the first draft of this story when he was just 19. For context, this was the late 1960s, and it's easy to see the comparisons of the violence in the story to the Vietnam War and the draft. While that was almost 60 years ago, the theme still resonates in the modern era as we face needless violence in other ways.
I'm not sure I'll watch The Long Walk again, but if I do, it will be to revisit these incredible performances and the story that gives you a little bit of hope in a tale full of death.
--
Baseline Score: 8/10
POSTED BY: Haley Zapal, NoaF contributor and lawyer-turned-copywriter living in Atlanta, Georgia. A co-host of Hugo Award-winning podcast Hugo, Girl!, she posts on Instagram as @cestlahaley. She loves nautical fiction, growing corn and giving them pun names like Timothee Chalamaize, and thinking about fried chicken.
Martin Cahill is an Ignyte Award-nominated writer of fiction and non-fiction living just north of NYC, with over twenty short stories published across magazines such as Reactor, Lightspeed, Clarkesworld, and many others. He is a contributor to Critical Role: Vox Machina – Stories Untold and the author of Critical Role: Armory of Heroes. His debut book, Audition For The Fox arrives on September 16th from Tachyon Publications. You can find him online @mcflycahill90 and his website, martincahillwrites.com
Today they tell us about their six books.
1. What book are you currently reading?
For review, I’m reading Sarah Gailey’s Spread Me and C. L. Clark’s Fate’s Bane, both of which I’ve been looking forward to immensely. On my own time, I just finished The Practice, The Horizon, and The Chain by Sofia Samatar, which was even deeper, richer, and more brilliant than I had thought it would be, I’m halfway through Dead Hand Rule by Max Gladstone, fun and thoughtful and epic all at once, and I’m about to start Cadwell Turnbull’s last book in his Convergence Trilogy, A Ruin, Great and Free.
2. What upcoming book are you really excited about?
Oh man, where to begin! The Everlasting by Alix E. Harrow, The Isle in the Silver Sea by Tasha Suri, The Works of Vermin by Hiron Ennes, King Sorrow by Joe Hill, Queen Demon by Martha Wells, Happy People Don’t Live Here by Amber Sparks, Tell Me Yours, I’ll Tell You Mine by Kristina Ten, and You Weren’t Meant To Be Human by Andrew Joseph white.
3. Is there a book you’re currently itching to re-read?
You know, I just found my original ARC of one of my very favorite books, All The Birds In The Sky by Charlie Jane Anders and having finished her newest (and spectacular!) novel, Lessons in Magic and Disaster, I have a real hankering to go back and remind myself of why I love this debut in particular so dang much.
4. A book that you love and wish you yourself had written?
Piranesi by Susanna Clarke. Brilliant, beautiful, bittersweet, surreal, and so utterly human. It is relevant and timeless, both, and mesmerizing in the ways only great art can be, as page by page, she pulls you away from the world and into the many halls and tides and rooms that our protagonist occupies, and adores. Whew. A true masterpiece.
5. What’s one book, which you read as a child or young adult, that has had a lasting influence on your writing?
The Redwall series by Brian Jacques is what comes to mind immediately, and the more I think about it, the more true it becomes. From all those many books I learned much of the art of writing and storytelling in general; each book spoke to me in different ways but they all celebrated that you could balance serious storytelling with moments of bright whimsy, that you could look danger and hardship in the eye and still offer it a place at your table, that good and bad would always exist but they were not always equal, and not always so binary. That simple things were worth fighting for, and loving; that it was better to go together; that there is worth in rest and enjoying the taste of cherry and dandelion cordials, in spite of bad days and deep fear. And personally, it taught me that you could be a young mouse named Martin and that even if it didn’t happen that day, one day you would find the heart to stand tall and face your bad days.
6. And speaking of that, what’s your latest book, and why is it awesome?
Audition For The Fox is awesome because it is more than one thing at any given moment! Time travel? Yes. Trickster gods and other divine beings? Yuh-huh. In-world fables about said gods? Sure thing. Distinct prose styles in every section. Oh yes. Comedy in moments of great crisis? Quite! Epic storytelling and worldbuilding balanced against character? Indeed. Audition For The Fox has a little bit of everything, and I don’t know if it’s always perfect but I do think all of the above work hand in hand to tell a unique, heartfelt, sometimes funny story of proving oneself, resisting oppression, standing up for the little guy, and doing what you can when you feel you’re powerless. I hope you pick up a copy and enjoy!
Thank you Martin!
POSTED BY: Roseanna Pendlebury, the humble servant of a very loud cat. @chloroformtea.bsky.social
I haven’t had this much fun with a book in quite some
time
I first heard about this book, which chronicles the many
hundreds of classroom educational films produced from the late 1940s through
about 1970, on a podcast about the evolution of the American teenager, and I
tracked down a copy at a used book sale. Used copies are readily available
online, and if you have even the slightest interest in independent filmmaking,
ephemeral films, or retro pop culture, I can’t recommend it highly enough.
You know these educational films from their endless parodies
on The Simpsons, usually starring Troy McClure, or featured appearances on Mystery
Science Theater 3000. But you probably don’t know the people
responsible for making these movies, the reasons they became so prevalent, and
the way in which, taken as a whole, they chronicle almost the entire postwar
American experiment.
Ken Smith profiles hundreds of these films, along with the
individuals and companies responsible for making them. But beyond that, Smith
weaves this information into a broader story told with a lot of insight and
humor. In fact, the longest section of the book is a catalogue of hundreds of
titles with blurbs about each of them. When I first got my copy, I figured I’d
read the narrative chapters and probably skip the catalogue, or just look
at it as a reference source. Instead, Smith’s descriptions were so entertaining
and in many cases the choices the films made were so bizarre that I found myself
reading the whole thing, and often subjecting my family to the
descriptions after I broke up laughing while reading on the couch.
At the time this book was written, these films were not
available to the public. Smith combed university archives and relied on the
assistance of icons in the film preservation field like Rick Prelinger to
screen these films privately and subsequently write about them. Thankfully for
big ol’ nerds like me, many of these films are now available on YouTube or
archive.org. I put together a playlist if you want to dive in.
Classroom Social Guidance Films
During World War II, the U.S. government relied heavily on
filmmaking for the first time to aid in the war effort. Famously, directors
like Frank Capra and William Wyler left Hollywood to create pro-Allied
propaganda films. Disney and Warner Bros. also contributed cartoons that had
some type of training angle or rallied viewers to the cause. The government
realized that you could train thousands of soldiers all at once, all
across the globe, by showing them a film. The military produced a ton of
films on different topics, and one of the most widely seen was Sex Hygiene,
directed by John Ford and starring George Reeves of the Superman TV show
fame, educating servicemen about how to not get syphilis.
1943 Collier's cartoon
Immediately after the war, progressive educators saw an
opportunity to use this same idea to benefit kids in school. My cursory
understanding of these films before reading the book was that they were a
method for enforcing conformity across society, but the truth is far more
complex.
Smith breaks up the bulk of Mental Hygiene into three
sections: The Genres, The Producers, and The Films.
The Genres include Fitting In, Cautionary Tales, Dating,
Girls Only, Drugs, Sex Education, Bloody Highways, and Sneaky Sponsors. Each
genre contains a spectrum from “kinda good” to “mostly ok” to “wow, that’s
cringe” to “oh no” to “what the hell did I just watch??”
The Drugs and Bloody Highways categories are the most likely
to make your skin crawl. Many of the anti-drug films, which really emerged in
the 1960s, rely on exploitative scare tactics and have almost no relation to
the reality of drug use. Seduction of the Innocent, for instance, claims
that marijuana is a powerful hallucinogenic. That movie’s 11 minutes of full-on
batshit crazy. The Bloody Highways collection, which famously scarred
generations of drivers-ed students by including real footage of mutilated bodies
at accident scenes, is worse. These films remain grisly and
disgusting – they are essentially snuff films – and Smith references other
reporting that suggests that the producers of these films were giving kickbacks
to police and ambulance companies to get out to accident scenes first, and that
larger bribery and corruption scandals arose out of those arrangements.
I expected the “Fitting In” and “Dating” categories to
be oppressive in their encouragement of rigid conformity, and some of that is
definitely there (Control Your Emotions essentiallyadvocates
not having any emotions), but I found something else that I didn’t expect –
actual good advice.
Isolation, a lack of community, and difficulties making
meaningful connections plague our current moment, here in 2025. I have
heard countless people online and in person talk about the challenges of just
knowing what to do in social situations. What’s expected on a date? Should you
pay for your date, or no? Is sex expected, or no? How do you make friends? How
do you keep them? What do healthy
relationships look like? Check the YouTube comments on a number of these social
guidance films, and you’ll find modern viewers relating to the feelings of
these characters and taking comfort in the fact that people have always had
these social anxieties.
In Shy Guy, a young Dick York (later of Inherit
the Wind and Bewitched) plays a high school student in a new town
who loves tinkering with radios and doesn’t know how to make new friends. His father
suggests just going to where other students hang out, not making a big deal of
it or putting too much pressure on himself, but just putting himself out there
where it’s at least possible to meet people. So Dick heads to the hang out at
the malt shop or wherever, and watches how people interact. He notices that the
people who have the most friends seem to be good listeners, ask questions, and
take a sincere interest in other people. This is still good advice. If you meet
a new person, you’re much more likely to grow that relationship by asking
questions and listening to them than by plowing over them and talking about
yourself the whole time.
Other social guidance films, like More Dates for Kay,
take this too far. Kay basically knows everything about everybody and constantly
reminds every other student she sees about their upcoming tests or doctor’s
appointments and everything else, to the complete elimination of her own
personality, or any personal wants or needs. So don’t be like Kay. But Dick
York thinks everybody will laugh at him fixing radios, until he’s at a party
and overhears another kid talking about building a radio. The 1950s didn’t have
language for “finding your people,” but that’s basically what Dick does in Shy
Guy.
The moral of other films is sometimes totally inscrutable.
My daughters and I watched Are You Popular? in which all the boys have
gone out with Jenny and so they think she’s a tramp, but they’re all also going
out with Caroline every night, and she’s great. We were unable to determine a
difference between Jenny and Caroline, or why Caroline wound up at the dance
and Jenny wound up standing by a bus bench crying one perfect tear.
Before the rise of the anti-drug scare films, these social
guidance films were intended to be a progressive resource for kids, providing
them with a framework for understanding expectations in new situations. In the
postwar economic boom, millions of Americans were moving from rural to suburban
communities, many families had stable economic resources for the first time,
and the rise of the automobile and commuter culture were changing the fabric of
society. These films were an effort to help kids adapt to new environments, and
some actually managed to do so successfully. Some less so. Like Cindy Goes
to a Party, where little Cindy’s fairy godmother comes to her in a dream
with tips for how to behave at her first party at a friend’s house, including
the rock-solid advice, “Don’t Break Things,” which is optically printed onscreen
when Cindy looks at a lamp that she presumably would’ve been fine with breaking.
Recontextualizing Conformity
However much fun I had reading this book, though, I
don’t want to gloss over the actual, profound effect it had on me and my
broader understanding of America in the 20th century. I have
always had an appreciation for both educational and marketing films of the
1950s. Animated educational films from production companies such as John
Sutherland (Destination Earth, Rhapsody in Steel, A is for Atom) were
produced in partnership with commercial firms and industry groups, while
companies like General Motors (Design for Dreaming) made consumerist
fantasies designed to sell housewives on new kitchen technology and commuters
on the latest automobiles.
These films were stylistically adventurous,
especially the animated ones, and provide a truly unique time capsule of a
period where innovation was happening rapidly, and the American middle class
was exploding in size. Against the backdrop of the dawning Cold War, the films
equate the ideas of American patriotism with being a good consumer,
and promise a future of ease and contentment. But until Mental Hygiene,
I never fully realized that classroom social engineering films were a distinct
category, separate from the types of industrial/educational films I was already
familiar with. And it’s the story of these mental hygiene films that really
allowed me to recontextualize much of my understanding of the 1950s.
For many people, the prevailing impression of the 1950s that
lingers today is one of forced conformity. The image of the nuclear family – the
breadwinner father, the homemaker mother, the two clean-cut kids staying out of
trouble and getting good grades – is central to the iconography of the era. For
too many people, that iconography is the only thing they know of the time. This
leads to a misguided sense that “everything was better” in the 1950s – that it
was an ideal time we should harken back to and try to somehow recapture. That
misunderstanding (or willful misrepresentation) obscures several realities of
life at the time (off the top of my head):
The
horrors of segregation and the Jim Crow South
Polio
The
Red Scare
The
Lavender Scare
The
forced exclusion of almost everyone but white men from the workforce
The
extraordinary prevalence of alcoholism and emergence of medications in
pill form (and subsequent rise of both acceptable – “Mother’s Little Helper” (Valium) to help
women forced to stay in the home battle anxiety – and unacceptable – teen –
drug abuse)
The
untold levels of trauma in World War II veterans who had returned home
The
collapse of extended family support networks as large corporations began
relocating workers to brand new communities around the country
The
unbelievable amount of death caused by motor vehicles that had yet to
implement safety protocols, and
The
creeping cultural anxiety of the Cold War and possible nuclear holocaust.
But the successes of the New Deal and the defeat of global
fascism (…at the time) created a sense of open horizons and limitless
possibilities. Social guidance classroom films played a part in that and
presented an opportunity for educators to try to build a better educational
system that benefited the children and broader society, as well. The origin of
these social guidance films was rooted in progressive education, and an
anti-fascist focus on community. These films were largely good-faith efforts to
help kids and reinforce a community-centric worldview that had helped defeat the fascist threat in Europe.
But here’s the rub: without anyone realizing it, the world
had already moved on.
The people who were making the films – the writers,
directors, and educational consultants – had endured all of that history…but
the kids had not. These children, the Baby Boomers, were born into maybe the
greatest economic upswing in human history, but at school they were being
preached a wartime-rationing way of being in the world when it was no longer
necessary and General Motors was telling them that to be good
Americans they had to be good consumers.
Even the projectors themselves were products war. The
armed forces had pioneered the practice of using films to train thousands of
soldiers quickly. The projectors in school classrooms used to play these social
guidance films had been used first to train soldiers, and then given to
the schools as war surplus. This gave progressive educators what they thought
was a golden opportunity to teach kids using these same, industrialized
approaches.
Then many of these kids came of age into a draft and
multiple, new foreign wars. They'd grown up told by a cartoon turtle to hide under their desks
in case the Soviets dropped a nuclear bomb on their town. They were being taught pro-social messages and told
that if they followed these rules, they’d be happy, well-adjusted, and they’d
fit in. But why? To grow up a drunk like dad, or take Valium like mom, or go
fight Koreans and Vietnamese who never did anything to them?
Traffic Safety films blamed teenagers for the massive
fatalities on the road, when it had far more to do with a lack of basic safety
features in cars, paired with increasingly powerful engines in vehicles built
by manufacturers that didn’t - any of them - have a safety department. Ralph
Nader’s Unsafe at Any Speed did what no scare-all classroom film
could do – it got Congress to mandate safety features in cars. Only then did
traffic fatalities begin to decline. In 1951, the rate of vehicle fatalities per 100 million miles driven was over 7. Since 1991, it's never been above 2. Yet teens had to watch films like Last
Date (another Dick York role) that shared the concept of “teenicide,” where
kids kill themselves before they can turn twenty by driving recklessly. It’s
all your fault, kids!
Sponsored films were sneaky, although sometimes playing an
important role. Tampon manufacturers were the only ones willing to make
menstruation films, which was a positive, but they did so while promoting their
own branded products. Many other companies produced pro-consumer propaganda
films hoping schools would show them as educational films and not notice or not
mind the product placements. Jam Handy, who was possibly the most prolific
producer of these kinds of films, said they were intended “for people whose
minds are to be reconditioned.” Oof.
I have to believe that the teenagers of the 1950s and
60s saw through this. The counter-cultural revolution of the 1960s seems
inevitable as a reaction to the forced conformity of the 1950s that definitely was emphasized. But learning about these films showed me it’s also possible
that the rebellion stemmed also from a generational divide, with parents and
children talking past each other against the backdrop of unprecedented economic
abundance and ever-intensifying cultural inequality and uncertainty.
The 1950s Indict the 1950s
With all this longing for the halcyon 1950s being so popular
these days, it’s valuable to ask what folks in the 1950s thought about all
that.
Two films stand out. The first is 1955's The Sound of a Stone,
directed by Herk Harvey for Centron Pictures in Lawrence, Kansas. Harvey made
hundreds of films for Centron, but is best remembered for directing the ghost
story film Carnival of Souls. A careful reading of Carnival of Souls
reveals a male director and male screenwriter working in 1962 acutely aware of the hazards
young women faced. In the film, Mary begins to experience frightening visions,
but they are in some ways depicted as less menacing than the reckless challenges of drag-racing boys on the road, the advances of her aggressive male neighbor,
or the powerlessness she experiences as a church organist under the gaze of the
pastor, who can throw her out of the congregation and rob her of her livelihood
simply for playing the wrong music. I think Harvey picked up this sensitivity
by making films for young people in a deeply troubled time.
In The Sound of a Stone, a young English teacher
assigns a book to his class, but when a student’s father discovers
the name of the book on a list of “subversive titles,” the English teacher and
his wife begin suffering under a reign of terror from the community. Soon, even
students who worked with the teacher on the school paper are also swept up, and
they begin receiving threats. It isn’t commented on, but one of the actors has
a severe limp in the film – most likely the result of Polio (see above). Soon
the boy’s father actually reads the book he was so quick to condemn, and stands
up at a school board meeting and recants. He does the right thing, and
everybody learns their lesson about blind censorshipthe Un=American
Activities Committeethe McCarthy hearings jumping to conclusions.
Or so it seems, until the final scene in the movie when somebody else throws a
brick through the teacher’s window, almost hitting his infant son, and letting
them know that they’d still better leave town. It remains a genuinely
compelling film today, but it’s not uplifting.
Then there’s 1959's What About Prejudice? In this film, none of the other students like
the new kid – Bruce Jones. They accuse him of stealing things they misplace, or
of starting fights, and attribute his behavior to “his kind,” an idea their
parents all reinforce. But then two of the gang crash their car into a bridge,
and the only witness to the accident is Bruce, who receives horrible burns all
over his body while rescuing the two other kids. This causes the gang to
rethink their blind hatred of Bruce, and reflect on how maybe they should’ve
looked at Bruce as a person first, and not just as a member of a group they
didn’t like. Here’s the conceit of the film, though – as much as Bruce is clearly
presumed to be Black, the filmmakers intentionally never show him, so that the
audience can insert Bruce into their own personally disfavored group. Maybe
Bruce isn’t Black. Maybe he’s Jewish. Or Catholic. Or Hispanic. Or any kind of
immigrant. Hell, maybe Bruce just has long hair. The film chooses not to say. The
fact that in 1959 the producers of an educational film about prejudice for high
schools intentionally didn’t show the object of that prejudice so the audience
could fill up that mental space with any number of widespread societal hatreds
is itself a horrible indictment of the society that produced it.
Mental Hygiene? Five stars, good book, very fun,
thought-provoking.
The 1950s? One-star, would not go back.
__
Posted by Vance K - co-founder and cult film reviewer for nerds of a feather, flock together since 2012. Sometime public service announcement and educational film professional.
Fran Wilde’s A Philosophy of Thieves mixes a heist story, a found family story, and a nuanced and considered look at a post-climate-change future story into a readable combination
Roosala Vane lives a double life (at least double). She’s studying at great expense at an academy in New Washington, her technical skills blossoming and growing. In her world, she seeks to become a creator and designer and builder of printed objects (and also, a hacker). But that is not her own identity. She is really Roo.
Roo is a member of the famous (and infamous) Canarvier troupe. The rich and powerful of this world have a particular game they like to play. They like to hire troupes of thieves to crash their opulent parties and steal from the guests and the estate. These hirings are carefully negotiated as to where and what is out of bounds, and the game is to try and catch the thieves before time runs out. The Canarviers are the best in the business. They don’t get caught, they stay within the contract, they are flashy and showy, and give the guests a good time. But times are tight and they have to take a tricky contract. One that will push Roo to the limit.
And, it turns out, Roo has an identity that she herself doesn’t even know...
Roo’s story is the heart of Fran Wilde’s A Philosophy of Thieves.
The heart of the book is Roo’s drives. She is the engine that keeps the novel going. We start off with a Canarvier heist, but things go wrong from the get go. The leader of the Canarviers, King, is captured. The Canarvier troupe is on the knife’s edge, and Roo not only needs a way to free King, but help keep the Canarviers solvent. And so she agrees to do a gig for Mason Graves and her girlfriend Evangeline Benford. The Benfords are rich and powerful, and the money for the gig could be enough to spring and free King on bail before he is shipped off to Alaska. So Roo is determined to get this gig to go off, get the money, free her mentor, and keep the Canarviers going.
This does not quite go to plan, and the novel delves into a rapidly rising series of improvises, plots, plans (including Mason’s) and the aforementioned identity that Roo is thrust into, very unwillingly. It’s not so much a heist novel as a post-climate-change technothriller that has strong worldbuilding and revolves around family and family relations, and the prices one is willing to pay for their ambitions and dreams.
I do want to say a few more words about Roo, no matter what name you give her. (More importantly, and a subtle point Wilde makes, it’s her for to decide how she names herself.) Roo is an extremely Wilde character that readers of her earlier work will find classic grace notes in. A relatively young woman, intelligent, clever, fierce in all the right ways. Sometimes self-doubting, but always loyal and determined to achieve her ends, which often revolve around her family and those whom she loves and protects. The very forward way Roo moves to try and meet her goals (which are so aligned with others, rather than herself) is endearing and sometimes painful. While we have a good sense of all the characters, especially the alternate POV Mason, Roo is where the heart of this book lies.
But it is the world, no surprise to anyone who has read more than one of my reviews, that really sucked me in and kept me turning pages. Yes, I was engaged strongly with Roo and her plight, struggles and adventures. (I only slowly warmed up to Mason; I kept seeing him as an adversary although he is much more *opposition* than *adversary* to Roo.) But it is the world that we see that is real and developed just enough for us to exert a playground of the imagination.
It’s a world after climate change has had its hammer blow. Seas have risen. Areas everywhere are devastated, to the point that even the atmosphere outside of domed or climate-controlled areas is detrimental to human health. There is a definite social and economic stratification of society in this world: Enclaves, Towns, and then the Skirts, which are definitely a drop in social class, and then the often poisonous and barely habitable regions outside of those. Crossing those regions is dangerous in and of itself, as we see a situation where a crossing goes wrong and leaves some of the characters in a salt flat where, if not rescued, they will absolutely die.
Wilde’s worldbuilding goes far beyond geography and goes into the implications of a post-climate-change world on things large and small. The loss of some of our cultural heritage as the seas rose, and the preciousness by which the rich hoard what they do hoard, is a particularly noticeable beat. And while this is a word of hacking and 3D printing, there are things that are hard and rare to come by. Natural foods like fresh blueberries are a treat only for the rich, grown in a greenhouse at high expense. And this is a world that is disconnected, too. We don’t get a sense of the grand politics (is there a United States still? *Maybe*), but not only are the city-states of this world seemingly semi-autonomous if not even more so (with a heaping side of corporate state politics), but getting to other Towns and Enclaves is mentioned as being difficult even for the ultra-wealthy Benfords.
It’s not something that is ever casually done. This leads more to the idea that this is a fragmented world, where Towns and Enclaves, with their Skirts around, are islands of civilization surrounded by devastation. While the rich and powerful are doing okay, those on more slippery rungs of the ladder need help. This is a society that the rich barely recognize as a society. And yet, while it is not the most pleasant of post-climate-change worlds, but it is one that Roo helps us be convinced is worth trying to save, rebuild and improve.
One interesting bit of worldbuilding and also a way to convey information is the in-world documents that pop up between chapters. Wilde’s excerpts from a digital magazine called Enclave and Towne provide board messages, private feeds, and more. It all feels a bit like Wilde has taken a page from Stand on Zanzibar, although the messages, articles and more are very much hyperlocal. Rather than trying to build out the world beyond the narrative (as we see in the Brunner novel), these documents review, reflect and comment on the action or action-adjacent items. It helps focus and direct the worldbuilding further to the plot and characters, and yet allows us the playground of the imagination that suggests there are plenty more feeds and channels like this we do not see.
I’ve been thinking about expectations lately, where a book’s logline or descriptive text do or do not match the reading experience. And so I want to quote from the promotional materials from the book:
“In these pages, you’ll find aspects of gaslamp fantasy complete with suave lords, charming rogues and high-stakes social events. You’ll find intricately planned and dangerous heists, brought together by a team of sniping but loving family members united around reclaiming their leader and father, King. And you’ll find astute interrogation of climate change and class in the tradition of our most esteemed science fiction.”
This all comes out nicely, except the phrase “gaslamp fantasy” kind of sticks in my craw a bit. Is it that we don’t quite have a good phrase for the kind of SFF that this book is a part of? There used to be, once upon a time, a phrase called “Fantasy of Manners” that was common in some corners of the SFF genresphere... back when it was in paper fanzines and maybe early newsgroups. It’s a mode of SFF that is very social- and class- oriented in nature, and often would deal with these strata of society in one form or another. Wilde’s novel definitely does this in spades, commenting on the very stratified society of her post-climate-change setting. There are a lot of scenes of intrigue, manners and social situations inside of those halls.
It’s not quite steampunk or dieselpunk; the punk is not there, but the aesthetic and feel are there. But can you have it outside of the time period?
The first time I came across this was in Walter Jon Williams’s Drake Maijstral novels, where a minor aristocrat/burglar in a galactic empire where Earth is conquered gets himself into some very funny situations, with social commentary to match. The feel is of this Fantasy of Manners throughout. Also recently, is work such as Malka Older’s Mossa and Pleiti novellas, which are set on space platforms orbiting Jupiter. While the nobles are replaced by academics squabbling and jockeying with each other, the “gaslamp fantasy” feel is there. Novels such as Everina Maxwell’s Winter’s Orbit also seem to partake of this sub-sub-genre. But again, can you have gaslamp fantasy set in the future? It’s not a gigantic niche of books, and gaslamp is the closest thing we have to a way to describe it. Gaslamp fantasy may almost set the expectations for the reader, but as a term for novels set out of period, it is a frustratingly incomplete and inaccurate term for novels such as Wilde’s. (A counterpoint: there ARE airships of a sort, even on the cover of the novel itself.)
Genre assignments aside, the novel does feel complete, deliciously done and recommended to all and sundry. However. the ending suggests a potential for future stories, and the back cover has #TheCanarvierFiles. Is there a sequel in the works? If so, I’d read it. Roo, once again, is a main draw, as is the world Wilde has built. I far more associate Wilde with her fantasy than with her SF, and this novel shows that I should recalibrate that association. More, please.
Highlights:
The strong and abiding main character of Roo, and her struggles with identity, and her drives and needs.
Vivid commentary by illumination of class, power, and wealth in a post-climate-change society.
Come for the heists, stay for the worldbuilding.
This Highlight approved by the Enclave and Towne, Stillwater Edition.
Reference: Wilde, Fran. A Philosophy of Thieves [Kensington Books/Erewhon, 2025].
POSTED BY: Paul Weimer. Ubiquitous in Shadow, but I’m just this guy, you know? @princejvstin.
The Night of the Return of the Revenge of the Attack of Unresolved Mommy Issues
In season 1 of this show, Wednesday Addams solved a murder mystery and saved her school. At the start of season 2, she deals with her unwanted fame by doubling down on her lone genius act, thus antagonizing the allies she ought to be relying on when a new murderer comes to town. The season concludes by showing Wednesday the consequences of her arrogance and putting her on a path toward repairing her strained relationships.
The execution isn't the most elegant, a problem that the show had since the previous season, but the expanded focus on the supporting cast provides parallels to Wednesday's journey that help the clumsy bits of the plot work more smoothly. Wednesday's roommate Enid has been avoiding her first boyfriend because she's afraid of telling him she fell in love with someone else, an unstable situation that resolves with a serving of karmic irony. Their classmate Bianca has been suffering in silence under the blackmail of the new school director, who is forcing her to use her mind control powers to secure donations; her plight gets predictably worse as she continues to refuse to ask for help. And Wednesday's brother Pugsley has been coping with his loneliness by keeping a zombie as a pet, starting a series of events that come back to threaten his whole family for their unhealthy habit of keeping dirty secrets.
The theme is clear: we can't handle everything on our own, and keeping people in the dark only brings more complications. Wednesday herself is the most significant illustration of this idea. She received a psychic vision that said she would cause the death of Enid, and she keeps this information to herself because she underrates Enid's strength and overrates her own. Through the whole season, Wednesday's biggest flaw is her excessive self-reliance. With Enid, she learns of her mistake by literally walking in her shoes. With her mother, Morticia, it takes the rest of the semester. Wednesday has valid reasons to keep strict boundaries with her meddlesome parents, but when lives are at stake, she should admit that her mother is more versed in the occult arts and that there's a precedent of psychic mishaps in her family tree.
Motherly ties are a central axis of this season. Besides the difficulties between Wednesday and Morticia, the latter also has unfinished business with her own mother. Bianca's predicament revolves around keeping her mother away from the influence of a destructive cult. Tyler, the secondary villain of season 1, kills his substitute mother figure, only to reunite with his actual mother, with whom he has a big final fight after she schemes to (symbolically) emasculate him. Even Pugsley, by virtue of accidentally giving life to a zombie, gets thrown into a motherly role at which he fails repeatedly and catastrophically. And to the extent that a severed hand can experience mommy issues, Thing goes through a small identity crisis arc of its own when its original body reappears to reclaim it.
While the character-focused writing is more solid this time (and one always welcomes more scenes with the radiant goddess that is Catherine Zeta-Jones), the first season's bad habit of overcomplicating the plot comes back with a vengeance. The early episodes build up to what promises to be an important antagonist who soon turns out to be a red (-headed) herring and becomes far less interesting from then on. The mysterious flock of ravens that plague the first half of the season are given an underwhelming explanation before being removed from the picture. The cult that had trapped Bianca's mother makes a last-minute reappearance that feels out of nowhere. In total, we meet no less than six separate characters who at some point seem to be this season's Big Bad Boss. Our young heroes are kept so busy investigating and unmaking this tangle of conspiracies that it's no surprise that, once again, this show that is supposedly set in a school doesn't have scenes where they attend classes or do homework.
Finally, there's the issue with the characterization of the Addams family. The show doesn't know whether it wants to portray the Addams as endearing weirdos or heartless sociopaths, so when they join efforts to save one of their own, it's hard to buy that they truly love each other (at one point Wednesday suspects her family will be threatened, and coldly proposes to sacrifice Pugsley; shortly after, he does fall in real danger, and she forgets her own words and jumps to the rescue). Add to this incongruity the family's volatile way of choosing which deaths to care about, and what we get is a tonally scattershot story that is more interested in the spooky aesthetic than in the consequences of dealing with dark forces on a daily basis. You can either tell a silly absurdist comedy where casual cruelty is hilarious and random murders are background noise in the macabre goofiness that defined the '90s films, or tell a crime drama where people's feelings matter, death is taken seriously and family trauma weighs on the protagonists. Aiming for both is trying to have your ant-infested cake and eat it too.
Nerd Coefficient: 7/10.
POSTED BY: Arturo Serrano, multiclass Trekkie/Whovian/Moonie/Miraculer, accumulating experience points for still more obsessions.
Slavery, steampunk, spirituality and science combine in a unique coming-of-age story about the search for knowledge and family connection
Washington Black is a steampunk-style adventure about Wash, a young Black boy trapped in brutal, violent slavery in 1800s Barbados, whose life is changed by his time with Titch, an idealistic but insecure inventor whose family owns the plantation where Wash is enslaved. The idea of a Disney-esque slave story may give viewers pause, especially with what initially seems to be a guilt savior trope in the premise of the story. However, Sterling K. Brown’s presence (behind and in front of the camera) grounds the story, as does the fact that the series is based on Esi Edugyan's gorgeous Booker Prize finalist novel of the same name. Ultimately, Washington Black is a story of self-determination, community, and creativity in the face of unimaginable odds.
The short, eight-episode series is primarily told in two timelines: childhood flashbacks and adult present in the life of the protagonist. George Washington Black, (wonderfully portrayed by Eddie Karanja), nicknamed Wash, is a ten(-ish)-year-old enslaved child on a brutal plantation in Barbados. He is cared for by Big Kit (Shaunette Renée Wilson), a sturdy enslaved woman who tells Wash stories of her/their original home in Dahomey. The slavemaster, Erasmus Wilde (Julian Rhind-Tutt), is particularly brutal in his abuse of the plantation slaves, leading some to commit suicide. But Kit tells Wash that if they die, they will wake up in their old home in the beautiful Dahomey.
Things change for Wash when Erasmus’s brother, Christopher Wilde (Tom Ellis), arrives at the family’s plantation to work on his invention of a flying machine. He takes an interest in Wash because the child is clever, and is the right size to balance his flying machine. When another plantation family member dies in Wash’s presence, Wash is falsely believed to be the killer, so Titch flees the island with him by using their newly created flying technology. Their journey takes them to many locales and dangerous adventures as Wash grows into a talented engineer and scientist. However, his relationship with Titch struggles under the pressures of their fugitive status and Titch’s own insecurities.
In the present timeline, Wash (Ernest Kingsley Jr.) is now a young man living under a different name in Halifax, Nova Scotia. He is mentored by Medwin (Sterling K. Brown), an older Black man who helps former slaves get to freedom and find their place in Halifax’s substantial and multicultural Black community, of which Medwin is the de facto leader. Wash meets Tanna (Iola Evans), a biracial young Black woman who is passing as white and traveling with her white scientist father (Rupert Graves). Wash and Tanna share an interest in science and are attracted to each other despite multiple barriers, including Wash being stalked by a relentless Javert-like bounty hunter (Billy Boyd) and Tanna being trapped in a forced engagement to William McGee (Edward Bluemel), a wealthy young British benefactor with his own strange secret.
There is a lot to like about the series, despite some shortcomings. The fantastical flying machines and other devices that propel the characters to their next adventure add a whimsical feel to the story, which is odd, given the grim premise. Throughout the show there is an appealing contrast and overlay of spirituality and scientific exploration, both of which require faith, imagination, and commitment from Wash. Additionally, we have a classic coming-of-age/journey narrative in the spirit of The Wizard of Oz or The Snow Queen, where Wash travels to new locations on his journey (from England to Dahomey, from the Caribbean to the Arctic) and meets interesting and supportive characters along the way. In particular, he encounters a new member of the African diaspora in each adventure, including a West Indian pirate queen and female warriors in Dahomey. Other important side characters include Gaius (in the past) as the observant, well-spoken, seemingly aloof house slave in Barbados who secretly keeps an eye out for the other enslaved people; and Angie (in the present), who is the sharp-tongued but kind maternal figure who runs the restaurant and who acts as an alternative to Wash’s original maternal figure Big Kit. The collection of diverse but connected characters adds to the fantasy folktale feeling of the story, as does Wash’s spiritual visits with the dead in the spiritual realm, and the implied mystical identity of Wash’s father.
On the other hand, many of the more central and grounded characters are introduced and then abandoned in the later episodes. This is particularly true of Medwin, who seems like a central character both in terms of the show’s narrative structure and in terms of his unwavering mentor relationship with Wash, particularly as an alternative to Titch and Titch’s insecurities. Tanna’s fiancé McGee is another key character whose surprising backstory is intriguing and highly entangled with Tanna and Wash’s relationship. However, he soon disappears from the plot with barely a one-sentence explanation. Tanna and Wash’s courtship progresses at a leisurely pace to the detriment of other key story elements, making the overall pacing of the story uneven, especially in the later episodes.
The abrupt and abbreviated treatment of many of Washington Black’s interesting characters and storylines indicates that a longer series might have created a more interesting exploration of the themes of racism, belonging, identity, betrayal, and scientific curiosity. Fortunately, the series has a satisfying ending that brings Wash’s tale full circle. Washington Black acknowledges the harshness of slavery and racism, but also opts to focus on relationships and optimism and to keep the onscreen violence moderate. This is in contrast to the novel, which has graphic content. As a result, the show is an intriguing confluence of adventure, romance, steampunk technology, and social commentary that is unique in contemporary storytelling and is certainly worth the journey.
Highlights:
Quirky steampunk tech
Interesting but underused characters
An exploration of slavery and racism and self-determination through a PG lens
Nerd Coefficient: 7/10.
POSTED BY: Ann Michelle Harris – Multitasking, fiction writing Trekkie currently dreaming of her next beach vacation.
It isn't exactly scary, but it will appease fans looking for an emotional finale for their horror mom and dad
The first Conjuring movie (2012) is an absolute master class in dread, horror, and freaky vibes. It's not only my go-to spooky movie, it's also one of my favorite films just in general. The other movies in the Conjuring universe—the sequels and movies like The Nun and Annabelle—are kitschy at best, and they're ones I'll rewatch only occasionally. But the o.g. Conjuring is near perfect.
Flashforward to my anticipation of The Conjuring: Last Rites. It's meant to be the conclusion to this fictional film series based loosely on the investigations and experiences of famed paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren. I always take the "based on" with a grain of salt, as ghosts do not exist. The cinematic portrayal of them, however, is extremely likable. Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga are absolutely delightful as tortured ghost hunters, and their chemistry is palpable. It's rare that you see on-screen characters that seem to truly love each other, and Ed and Lorraine do just that.
What sets Last Rites apart from the other films in the franchise is that this movie is about them and their family, not the tortured families who happen to inhabit deeply possessed buildings and their paranormal struggles. Here, we're in the 1980s, and the Warrens' daughter, Judy, is starting to become embroiled in their investigations. Like her mother, she is also an empath and possesses psychic abilities. As the family becomes concerned when she gets engaged to her boyfriend, Tony, the family is pulled into another paranormal case—this time one that the Warrens first encountered decades ago.
The Smurl family lives in a coal-mining-soaked town in Pennsylvania, and their demon origin story begins with a haunted mirror, one that the Warrens have experienced before. It seems like the setup of every other Conjuring story, yet something is missing. The haunting that's taking place at the Smurl house is creepy, to be sure, but it never really feels threatening. The stakes never feel high. I think this could be because the house is small, and its neighbors are jam-packed around it—there's only about six feet between them. I have strong opinions on what houses work well within the haunted house trope, and these babies need room to breathe. They need at least a few acres or so, and they need isolation. It's why you'll never see a haunted studio apartment or a haunted beach condo. You need to be able to climb a staircase and feel absolutely alone, and hear echoes and shouts from across the building that you can't readily identify.
When it comes to the scares in The Conjuring: Last Rites, there are a couple of good ones, but nothing that stands out like the spooks in the original. You learn the routine pretty quickly: A character is alone, the music stops, and then you get a jump scare of some unidentified demon.
We never learn the backstory of the demons in the Smurl house, unlike the tortured witch Bathsheba in the original. I think this greatly detracts from the emotional heft of the haunting. Turns out the demons lived on the "land" that the house occupies, so the lore is downgraded, and you never feel any stakes. Also, unrelated: One day I will write a paper on haunted houses as a metaphor for working-class people and the failures of capitalism, but today is not that day. It will revolve around how even though a family feels physically threatened, being unable to afford a non-haunted house or even to escape the mortgage of a haunted house is truly the most horrific part of this beloved genre.
You do get Easter eggs throughout the film, however, so hardcore fans of the Conjuring universe will appreciate that. At one point, you see the evil doll Annabelle blown up to 15 feet tall in a scene that made me laugh more than anything else. Speaking of laughter, I saw this movie in 4DX, which is the interactive, shaking-seats-and-gusts-of-wind experience. It is not, in fact, interactive, and it mainly just made me laugh. It takes you out of the experience, especially when the man next to you is shaking and spilling popcorn in his seat.
I wanted very badly to love this movie, as I've mentioned before, because I've been chasing the high of seeing the first Conjuring since 2012. Perhaps it was lightning in a bottle, or maybe I've become so much of a horror movie cynic that I'm incapable of being truly scared. There are moments of true high camp in this, and I found myself laughing more than shuddering despite the multiple different pools of blood, demonic jump scares, and priests hanging themselves.
This movie does work as a denouement to the fictional Warren storyline, though. The characters of Ed and Lorraine, and now Judy, are good people, and you're always rooting for them to save another family, even when they're so ready to be retired. When the Warrens are faced with possession and death, the stakes suddenly become much higher. I did find multiple parts heartwarming, especially towards the end, when they look toward the future and a life without ghost-hunting. If you're not into sentimentality for these characters, you'll be extremely bored at multiple points.
Judy and her boyfriend are (seemingly) set up as perhaps the next generation of demon hunters, but I suppose time will tell. In the meantime, I will be watching the original Conjuring every spooky season like clockwork, when the leaves start to fall and the temps get a little chilly.
Nerd Coefficient: 6/10.
POSTED BY: Haley Zapal, NoaF contributor and lawyer-turned-copywriter living in Atlanta, Georgia. A co-host of Hugo Award-winning podcast Hugo, Girl!, she posts on Instagram as @cestlahaley. She loves nautical fiction, growing corn and giving them pun names like Timothee Chalamaize, and thinking about fried chicken.