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JULIA by Sandra Newman

January 6, 2024 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

In Sandra Newman’s JULIA, readers re-experience the bleak world of George Orwell’s 1984 from the character Julia’s point of view. Newman chose some pretty big shoes to fill, which had me wary whether this novel was going to work out for me. The second half gets us to the right place, though, and I overall enjoyed it.

There’s a whole sub-genre dedicated to reinterpreting classic stories from a female perspective, which usually isn’t my bag but that’s obviously fine. (A notable exception for me would be HOMER’S DAUGHTER by Robert Graves, an excellent interpretation of THE ODYSSEY.) What drew me to JULIA was how absolutely powerful 1984 has always been for me. It’s a novel I re-read every five years or so. Apparently, the author was invited by the Orwell estate to write a female-oriented version of the story.

George Orwell was a socialist who fought fascism as a volunteer in the Spanish Civil War. He opposed totalitarianism in all its forms, from the Soviet Union to Nazi Germany, both of which borrowed the language of socialism to appeal to the common man (socialism was very popular at the time and carried moral force) but became something else entirely. In true socialism, workers own all businesses and run them and society democratically. In Nazi Germany, big business went on as before only directed by the regime, and in the USSR, the government itself became big business, a form of state capitalism. Orwell’s vision of totalitarianism in 1984 is based on these regimes, and it’s a horrifying, startling, and brilliantly conceived vision of dystopia.

Newman had her work cut out for her not only in adding to a brilliant novel of ideas but in bringing Julia to life, as in the original story she does little and is in some respects a plot device. The result for me was mixed. Julia trivializes life in Oceania and Winston’s ideas to the point of undermining 1984, and the Party is simply not as terrifying, more an incompetent 1960s communist bloc government than a vast omnipotent machine designed to perpetuate its hold on power forever. O’Brien, a perfect villain, starts off great but also ends up trivialized to an extent for stealing ideas from a female colleague.

Even Julia herself is to an extent trivialized. In 1984, she has sex, steals, and commits other crimes as her way of fighting the system. As a foil to Winston, her idea of rebelling in 1984 is to stubbornly live as best one can, to which she uses her body, while Winston’s idea of rebellion is more of the mind, living with fear and knowledge he will be killed such that he considers himself and anyone else in the Party to be already dead. She’s kind of a bad-ass in her way in 1984; she gets the truth in a way Winston has a hard time grasping. In JULIA, the titular character seeks sex as a balm or from some other psychological need, and it becomes an end in itself rather than a means of saying FU to the Party. Her generalizations about men and individuals in her life are more cutting than those she has about the Party that controls and threatens every aspect of her existence. I think Newman and I had a different take on the character, or perhaps my perception of Julia was on the surface and I didn’t explore what it would be like to be her day to day–either way, I had to get used to it as a reader.

All of this made me falter, but it didn’t turn me off outright. The second half of the novel gets far darker, as Julia’s fantasies are wrecked and she sees the Party for what it is and herself in a new way, and I thought: There it is! It’s here the worlds of JULIA and 1984 became one for me, and I was turning pages. Newman’s a skilled writer, and when it all came together, I started to really immerse in the story. She also started to add her own ideas to the original in a way that complemented and fleshed out Orwell’s themes. I was fairly gripped as the story reached the climax, and here Newman did something particularly controversial, which was put her own interpretation on Big Brother, the Party, and whether an alternative would be much better or be prone to make the same mistakes. It’s possibly the most striking departure from the far bleaker ending of 1984, but I didn’t mind it, I liked it for what it was, and I respected the author’s take.

Overall, JULIA is a good read, but appreciating it requires reading 1984, which in turn sets up certain expectations. One could argue JULIA stands on its own, and that’s fine, but again, as 1984 is such an important novel, it was hard for me to separate the two. Anyway, I’d recommend it if you love 1984, though I’d caution to keep your expectations in check and take the novel as it’s presented.

Filed Under: Books, MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE, The Blog

RED RABBIT by Alex Grecian

December 29, 2023 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

Alex Grecian’s RED RABBIT turned out to be one of my favorite horror reads during an explosive year for quality horror.

The publisher synopsis promises a tale of a posse hunting a woman wanted for practicing witchcraft in the Old West. I love horror and I love Westerns, so I thought I’d give it a shot. I ended up reading a story that was far richer and more imaginative than the simple tale I expected.

The novel mostly focuses on a widowed schoolteacher who connects with two cowboys and a witch hunter named Old Tom, who is en route to a small town to collect the bounty for killing a local witch. Together with a mute child named Rabbit, they all set out for the town, only to run into numerous obstacles in what is a somewhat meandering and quite episodic plot; the Old West, it seems, is a dangerous place and very haunted.

I loved the imaginative integration of so many horror elements into the Western genre. Demons, witches, ghosts, cannibals, and other horror elements are expertly woven by Grecian into the story as a kind of haunted Americana, and very convincingly too, providing an alternate history of sorts where monsters are real and just another hazard in the American landscape. Part of the charm is each is given an interesting back story or folkore-ish element. The demon in particular is very well done, as is the “hunter.” The horror elements really shine. They’re super well done, and they make the story surprising and feel driven by its own odd logic.

On the downside, there are a lot of characters, and we never really get too deep into any one of them, making it difficult to really empathize all that much. That may bother some readers. As each character was otherwise very well drawn and interesting, I personally didn’t mind it; I found them all quite memorable, and the emotional distance I wound up feeling from them didn’t bother me, as there was so much other stuff going on that kept me turning pages.

Overall, RED RABBIT is a solid Western and a terrific horror novel. Recommended for fans of both looking for something different.

Filed Under: APOCALYPTIC/HORROR, Books, MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE, Reviews of Other Books, The Blog

THE DELUGE by Stephen Markley

December 27, 2023 by Craig DiLouie 1 Comment

Stephen Markley’s THE DELUGE is not only the best fiction read of 2023 but one of the most important novels I’ve ever read. In this extraordinary and ambitious novel, Markley lays out a scenario for a climate change future, and it’s even more horrifying than you imagined, leading Stephen King to call it “terrifying.”

The novel had been recommended to me, but at first I found it a little daunting. At 900 pages, it’s a door stopper of a read. I don’t mind long reads, but they don’t always earn the length and can be self-indulgent (Ayn Rand, I’m looking at you). I figured, well, I can at least give it a shot. I’m glad I did.

Told through a large cast of characters, we see the horror of climate change. Heat waves, massive storms, gradual sea level rise swamping coasts, collapse of ecosystems, a weakening food chain, and the terrifying threat of massive pockets of methane in ocean and permafrost releasing to essentially end human civilization and ultimately humanity itself as a species. Remarkably and deeply researched, this is climate change without platitudes (like how technology and specifically tech billionaires will save us), hyperbole, or political agenda, just the best available science.

On the human side, we see the even scarier reaction to the world slowly fraying. Massive refugee flows, skyrocketing food inflation, entire towns and cities being gutted by flood and fire, overdeveloped coastal areas washed away. The rich donate to causes while continuing to profit off the problem, asking for government bailouts while undermining any effective legislation. Then we have the usual portion of the population that reacts to fear by trying to make any problem worse by fabricating an entirely different reality of denial and obfuscation, ripe for the usual grifters. Lefties aren’t spared either, criticized for ideological purity tests, infighting, and tying every single social justice aim to addressing climate change. Beholden to big money, both parties prove worthless and impotent to address the crisis.

In short, there are three major reactions to what happens. Those who see the problem and the solution scream like Cassandras, only to be attacked and thwarted at every turn. Those who are profiting from the problem will do anything to maintain business as usual. And those suffering from the problem will either rise up or just as likely be distracted and wind up punching down. If you’ve been paying attention to American politics over the least 10+ years, you’ll likely find yourself saying, yeah, this is exactly how it’s going to go down.

Part of the problem here is we can’t address climate change while maintaining capitalism and the political system in its present form, and that brings out the usual tiring hysteria about the New World Order and Marxist gulags. It’s always weird to me how people get their ass kicked by capitalism, a system designed to break every four to eight years, and then blame the government, whose minimal safety net and regulation is the only thing separating them from outright robber baron dystopia–alternately holding the government accountable for every problem but then screaming “Socialism!” at any effort to solve the problem. (I just saw an example of that this year–in my province, oil production is 7% of GDP but you’d think it was 95%, based on our premier’s policies and rhetoric, and even though half the province was literally choking on another year of rampant forest fires, and even though the premier cut budget for wildfire fighting services in half, she was re-elected with a solid majority, which simply boggles the mind.) To address climate change, we have to stop the legalized bribery, hold both parties accountable to the problem, stop thinking corporations will solve it for us, and hold big business–particularly the fossil fuel industry, which has known about climate change for many years but even now actively suppresses science and government action–accountable for their pollution, the cost of which they largely pass on to the rest of us.

We see these perspectives portrayed through a wide range of characters, eco-terrorists and scientists and policymakers and others, spanning two decades of steady environmental collapse. The characters themselves are interesting, often have a distinctive personality and voice to distinguish them from the rest, and are deeply drawn. Nonetheless, the author made the decision to make it not easy to tell whose point of view we’re getting when each new chapter starts. This results in a mental effort with each new chapter that becomes annoying. With so many characters, it’s not easy to keep track of everyone even without this confusing approach. But kudos to the author for managing all these characters and intertwining storylines in a tale that is packed with science and economics but is also very human and packs a big punch with horrific sequences that steadily ramp up the story into becoming an outright thriller. In this, THE DELUGE compares favorably to Kim Stanley Robinson’s THE MINISTRY FOR THE FUTURE, another door stopper I loved that reads more like nonfiction than fiction and whose characters often feel like mouthpieces for different views than real people.

Anyway, that was ultimately a minor criticism compared to how much I absolutely loved this book for telling hard truths. My only major criticism is the same as I had for THE MINISTRY FOR THE FUTURE, which is how much hope there is we can act in time. When America finally starts to do the right thing, it does every right thing, and I have my doubts we can pull it off. In my opinion, America is essentially run by billionaires profiting from today’s capitalism, choosing politicians and policy, getting bailed out by the taxpayer when they make bad investments, and believing if the world ends, they’ll be insulated from it–as if any seat on a burning plane is the one you’ll survive in and that all that wealth they can’t get enough of will be worth anything in the end. Still, I appreciated the novel’s recipe for victory in the war against climate change and the hope it represents.

Overall, I encourage everyone to read THE DELUGE. In my view, it’s the most important work of fiction of the year if not the decade.

Filed Under: APOCALYPTIC/HORROR, Books, MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE, Reviews of Other Books, The Blog

QRF Releases!

November 17, 2023 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

QRF, my latest military thriller, is now available to read! Available in Kindle eBook, audiobook (narrated by Garrett Brown), and paperback, it’s available exclusively at Amazon.

When an old comrade doing humanitarian work is captured by the Islamic State during the Iraqi civil war in 2016, four war veterans leave their civilian lives to attempt a dangerous rescue in the most dangerous place on Earth. Told in two timelines–the Iraq War and the civil war that followed–QRF is about war and the debts it imposes on those who survive it.

Get it here!

(Special thanks to Jackie Druga for providing the simple, striking cover and Brent Nichols for putting together the paperback.)

Filed Under: Books, CRAIG'S WORK, HISTORY, MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE, Other History, Q.R.F., The Blog

HOW TO MAKE A HORROR MOVIE AND SURVIVE Now Available for Pre-Order!

October 27, 2023 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

HOW TO MAKE A HORROR MOVIE AND SURVIVE, my latest horror introduction from Hachette’s Redhook imprint, is now available for pre-order!

The book drops June 18, 2024 and will be available in paperback, eBook, and audiobook everywhere books are sold.

A slasher film director wants to make a horror movie using a cursed camera that kills anyone he cares about. The scream queen he loves wants to survive the night. FINAL DESTINATION meets Netflix’s BRAND NEW CHERRY FLAVOR in this story about Hollywood, the eighties slasher era, and why we love horror movies.

Check it out and pre-order it from Amazon here. Thank you for reading!

Filed Under: APOCALYPTIC/HORROR, Books, Cool Science, Craig at Work, CRAIG'S WORK, How to Make a Horror Movie and Survive, MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE, WRITING LIFE

My Three-Book Horror Deal with Orbit

October 26, 2023 by Craig DiLouie Leave a Comment

I am very happy today to announce that I have signed a deal with Orbit, Hachette’s speculative fiction imprint, for three horror novels to be published between 2025 and 2027.

The first is MY EX, THE ANTICHRIST: “When a rock musician learns her ex-boyfriend is the Biblical Antichrist, she must find a way to stop him before he grows powerful enough to control the world. DAISY JONES AND THE SIX meets THE OMEN in this novel about free will, music, and the apocalypse.”

This novel will follow HOW TO MAKE A HORROR MOVIE AND SURVIVE, on a previous deal with Hachette to publish in June 2024: “A slasher film director wants to make a horror movie using a cursed camera that kills anyone he cares about. The scream queen he loves wants to survive the night. FINAL DESTINATION meets Netflix’s BRAND NEW CHERRY FLAVOR in this story about Hollywood, the eighties slasher era, and why we love horror movies.”

The other two in the three-book deal will be announced later. This will make eight novels I’ve done with Hachette, and I’m grateful for the opportunity to work again with my awesome editor and one of the largest and highest-quality publishers of fiction in the U.S.

Thank you for reading my work, which literally makes all this possible. Stay tuned for these upcoming releases!

Filed Under: Apocalyptic, APOCALYPTIC/HORROR, Books, Craig at Work, CRAIG'S WORK, MEDIA YOU MIGHT LIKE, My Ex, The Antichrist, WRITING LIFE

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