Speed Reading: A (Hoped For) Superpower

If you could have any superpower, what would it be?

Whenever people ask me this question, I usually run down the traditional pros and cons of invisibility versus flying versus mind reading but the honest, actual truth is I’d choose speed reading. I would rather read three times faster than I do now (with complete recall and undiminished joy) than prowl forbidden hallways unseen beneath a Cloak of Invisibility or leap tall buildings in a single bound or peer inside the unguarded mind of friends and foes.

With the talent of speed reading, I could plow through my personal bookshelves and liberate the unread volumes from their years of dusty confinement. I could traverse my library’s bookshelves, first reading everything that interested me from the new book shelves before systematically attacking the circulating stacks in Library of Congress Classification order. First: philosophy, psychology and religion. Then: World and American History. Then: Geography and Anthropology. Next: Political science, law, education, music, fine art, language and literature, science, medicine and technology. I would weave from topic to topic, bouncing from print text to eBook and back again, setting each discipline atop the other like a foundation of well-hewn bricks. When I had digested the entire collection, I would end my journey in the Zs, which is where Library of Congress places Bibliography, or Books about Books. And I would take extravagant notes until my Goodreads account was bursting with To Read titles. And my college would have to hire two additional interlibrary loan clerks to manage the volume of my requests.

The PDF app on my iPad would rejoice whenever I pushed an article there because, at last, articles saved for eventual reading would be read. And my Pocket app for mobile would be a well-oiled machine — articles in, articles read.

It would be a joy.

And so, try to imagine the scene when I came home from work today and my wife said, “Do you want to sign up for this summer speed reading class? They meet for two hours every Monday evening in June. Its kind of expensive, but we can figure it out if you want to give it a try.”

Yes!

When the call center guy at registration asked about my goals for the program, I told him I read about 20 books each year but want to read more. My dad’s dad took a speed reading class many years ago and eventually came to read a book a day. I know because my grandfather let me scavenge his basement mounds of mass-market paperbacks. That’s where I found out about Clive Barker and Dean Koontz and Robert R. McCammon.

And so, I signed up for summer speed reading classes with the University of Tennessee non-credit program. I gave the call center guy at registration my credit card number and fully expect to gain an incredible superpower in return. I always look forward to summer but this summer is going to be extra nerdtastic. You can have your fantasies about invisibility or flying or mind-reading. I will be gaining an actual super power. I’ll be learning how to read. By August I expect to be making my way through the Top 100 Lists of the Top 100 Books About x.

And yes. You’ll be most welcome to peruse my basement.

It Is What It Is | Flash Fiction

Aubrey. I’m dead. It is what it is.

It sucks.

I raised you to live your life with no regrets but I’m realizing too late that any thinking person who gives a damn is going to have his regrets. We make choices. Some of them hard. Forget what I said about no regrets. People who care are going to have regrets. I have them, too.

I am trying to imagine how you must feel, watching this message. Me on a screen telling you things I could have easily told you in person. We talked every night. Sometimes I called you. Most times you called me. I need you to know how good it felt to get those calls or the texts and emails. It felt good to know you were thinking of me, making room for me in your life even when you lived so far away. That room was my world. It was everything.

But now, I’m dead and you are wondering why I didn’t tell you I was dying. It isn’t easy to explain. I wanted you to know, but I didn’t want to bring that into our special space. I just wanted to be what I was for as long as I could be.

And I had work to do. Important work that I couldn’t share. It wasn’t that I didn’t trust you. I just didn’t want it to swallow your life until it had too.

When your mother died, I promised I would raise you to be brave and strong and curious. I raised you to be kind. To take care of others. And I am so proud of the person you are. It is my sweetest reward.

I always told you not to worry yourself with whether or not there is a God. A God who needs you to believe so much without seeing isn’t a God worth knowing.

I was wrong. There is a God. He just doesn’t like us all that much.

Sorry. I’m rambling. Its the medication. They’ve got me on these pills that mix my head up, make it hard to think. Everything I used to do easy comes much harder now.

When you see this, I’m already dead. But I want to tell you things about my life I never took the time to tell you. I’ve been reading a lot of philosophy. Its bullshit, mostly. But useful bullshit. It puts your life in perspective. It teaches you to think about yourself realistically. Most people walk around clutching their religion to help themselves feel important or they spend their lives angrily pushing it away to help themselves feel important.

We aren’t important. But we have importance. We can do important things.

This isn’t what I want to tell you. I’m getting tired and I’m afraid I’ll leave something out. Something you will need to know. You’re so smart. You’ll figure it out.

None of them are alike. Each of them has a different story, a different need. Treat them individually. Get to know them. They won’t always tell you what they need. They won’t usually know. Take the time to figure it out.

Every one of them has fallen such a long way. Every one of them has been marked by that fall. Just be the kind person you already are. The rest will be okay.

I’m getting tired. I need to rest. I’ve written a lot of notes to help you figure it out. It is powerful, terrifying work. It is necessary.

I wish I could see you. Tell you these things.

How we used to sit on the porch and watch the night sky. All those shooting stars you tried to wish magic out of. So many times you wanted them to be ghost angel of your mother. I told you they weren’t actually stars or your mother but leftover bits of iron from the leftover universe, which was something even better than magic. We were both wrong.

Regrets.

Now I’m dead, and it is what it is. I just need to say it again.

Every day you made a special place for me and I made a special place for you. Keep carrying me there. But don’t stop with me. Open yourself up. Break yourself open.

It doesn’t matter if there’s a God. There are miracles. I know there are. Let them come in. Feed them. Clothe them. Set them on their way.

Okay. That’s all kiddo. Time to go now.

It is what it is.

Eyes Front | Flash Fiction

There is nothing you can do. No time. When Daddy says get in the car, you get in the car. You don’t make him wait. You don’t talk back. You don’t ask questions. You sit in your seat, eyes front, buckle your seat belt and be ready for the ride.

You won’t know where the two of you are going. It does not matter. Where Daddy goes, you go.

Sometimes it is scary because it happens so quick. One minute you are eating Cheerios together in the living room, watching late night TV and you are laughing together about the stupid things people tell Johnny Carson and everything is great and happy and fun and then, with exactly no warning, Daddy goes all still, listening for something you cannot hear. And he leans forward in his chair, suddenly tense and ready to spring, like he is waiting for something to happen and then he is yelling and grabbing for his keys. Pulling at your arm, telling you to hurry. Yelling for you to be quiet. And there is urgency in him. There is precision. And you reach for your favorite toys because there is no telling where you will be going this time, for how long. You manage to grab Dolly which is good because Dolly is the only important doll anyway. She’s the one your momma gave you when you were too young to remember. And it would be awful to leave Dolly behind since you don’t really remember your momma except for a few pictures but you like to think that Dolly remembers her and leaving Dolly would be the same as forgetting, except forgetting forever, which would be another kind of dying for your momma who is dead already. At least that it what Daddy says but you can’t be sure because sometimes you look behind you to try and find the person driving the car that is following you in the abysmal dark and it is a woman so you think it might be your momma but you don’t dare ask your Daddy about that because he just tells you to shut up about that and keep eyes front.

Eyes front is the family rule. Look ahead. Be ready to move. Go when Daddy says go.

And you are in the car and you are trying to be brave even though you are really scared, which is not the same thing, Daddy sometimes tells you when you are safe and quiet at the hotel or truck stop or wherever the two of you will be sleeping tonight. Even when you are scared, you can always be brave. Actually, when you are scared is the only time you can be brave. And it is good to see him smile when he tells you this but it isn’t his good smile. It is his eyes front smile. The smile that isn’t happy or glad about anything. The smile that doesn’t want questions.

It would be nice not to have to be brave so much all the time. But even that doesn’t matter after a few hours on the road when Daddy is playing the radio and singing along and he isn’t driving the car so fast and there’s time to watch the night time world pass by. The way the world seems to emerge into the headlights. Like the trees are stretching out to touch you. And the yellow dashy lines from the narrow, country highway strobe in the dark. There are no gas stations out here and Daddy is keeping his eye on the gas needle and also an eye on the speed needle but mostly he is practicing what he has told you. Eyes front. Looking forward.

He drives until you fall asleep. You wake up in a strange, different place. Dolly is with you so maybe momma is with you too. You don’t tell Daddy this. It would just stress him out. He looks sweet and peaceful, sleeping in the hotel room lounge chair. He needs to shave. He needs to brush his hair.

You should brush your teeth but you can’t because you left too fast and didn’t bring your toothbrush. You lay on the bed in the dark room and look up at the hotel ceiling, an unfamiliar sky. There’s nothing to see there. You look anyway. Eyes front.

After a while you will be sleeping and then there will be the dreams. Momma and daddy and kiddo. All one happy, smiling family.

Prompt: “No Daddy No” by Pretty & Twisted.

Star Wars: A new New Hope

It has been a week since Star Wars: The Last Jedi dropped and armies of hyperventilating nerd trolls are still wandering the streets looking for their despoiled childhoods. I get it. I felt it, too. Last Jedi was weird. It was packed full of not always funny jokes, the battles were fewer and less epic and, oh yeah, the Luke Skywalker thing.

Star Wars was my childhood. I learned how to tell stories by playing with buckets of action figures everyday for hours and hours and hours. I mastered the ventriloquistic verities of blaster and lightsaber battles. I could voice distinct X-Wing, Tie Fighter and Millennium Falcon flight sounds.

I had the requisite adolescent crush on Princess Leia, though I strongly preferred her in the giving orders/looking worried Hoth/Cloud City get up rather than the infamous golden bikini of Jabba’s Palace. The Endor look was fetching, but the braids were a bit too precious.

Yoda was my sensei. “Do or do not. There is no try,” is everything you need to know about Buddhist meditation.

John Williams was the soundtrack to my early years. I still use the “Throne Room/End Titles” to celebrate important life events. Not sure why Michelle and I didn’t use it for our wedding march. That was a missed opportunity.

So far, every new Star Wars release has been more or less a predictable affair. The Lucasfilm logo appears, the audience cheers, the unnecessary preamble words scroll and we launch into a game of interstellar cat and mouse at warp speed. Along the way, we are reminded that so and so is our only hope. Ben Kenobi, Luke Skywalker, even that pesky Anakin twerp. All of that is done now. The Last Jedi killed the formula. They told a different story.

The first 7 episodes were the Skywalker family story. Dysfunctional to be sure, but I defy you to name a single intergalactic hero worth his/her salt that doesn’t have father/mother/sister baggage. We were led to believe Star Wars would continue to be a story about the crucial importance of an all-powerful Chosen One magically born at precisely the right moment to save the galaxy from itself and restore the rightful order to things. That’s the story Lucas was telling. Its the story we thought we wanted told in endless iteration. It isn’t the story we need.

The story we need now is the story in which Luke says, “It is time for the Jedi to die, and Yoda says “pretty much”. And when Luke can’t bring himself to light the fuse, Yoda does it for him.

So many wasted conversations wondering if Rey would turn out to be a Skywalker or a Kenobi. She’s neither. Ha! She’s just a ordinary not-Skywalker like the rest of us, except she has more Force awakened in her pinky finger than all the Mace Windus and Qui-Gon Jinns who came before. Rey is a reminder that, if the Force truly is the mystical energy that binds all living things, then we should all be enjoying a bit more of it in our daily lives.

The Star Wars story we need now is one where heroes can be cowardly and where even Jedi Masters make wrong choices and are called to atone for their disturbing lack of vision.

We need a story where the cocky, reckless Han Solo-type makes things worse, not better, by taking things into his own hands. Luck isn’t a plan. Luck gets people killed.

And we need to see the Bad Guys majorly conflicted about their path to the Dark Side. We couldn’t watch Episodes I, II and III and wonder if Anakin would fall. It was his destiny. We knew it would happen. We had already met Darth Vader. Anakin’s fate was set long before the kick-ass pod race on Tatooine. Yeah, he killed a bunch of Tusken Raiders and set fire to the temple. Boys will be boys.

Kylo Ren is far more interesting. He doesn’t have to go dark. He has a choice. He knows his parents. They are good people. Still, he has that inexplicable urge to come into his full power, to be his own person, no matter the cost. He starts out pretty emo but eventually says cool, deep, existential stuff like, “Let the past die. Kill it, if you have to. That’s the only way to become what you were meant to be.” That’s straight up Nietzsche.

And let’s have a moment with Rose, who risks her life to save Finn from his suicide run on the First Order’s battle cannon. Did she seriously just prevent Finn from ending the First Order’s assault on the rebel base? Maybe, but it is okay because “We’re going to win this war not by fighting what we hate, but saving what we love.” After the most intensely political year of my life, I’m hoping we might all agree to go out and get this tattooed somewhere on our selves. It is everything I have come to understand and believe about future building.

I waited a week to start writing this post. I needed time to figure out why this film felt so much more complicated than all the others. I think I get it now. The Last Jedi is the film that makes Star Wars more than just a cool idea George Lucas had forty plus years ago. This is the film that makes Star Wars more than just an insanely profitable product line.

Star Wars has been liberated from my childhood. Star Wars doesn’t just belong to me. It doesn’t just belong to you. It certainly doesn’t belong to George Lucas. It belongs to everyone now. Star Wars has become mythology, a narrative that connects the nostalgic past to the unwritten future.

When I was three years old, I watched Luke Skywalker receive a message: “Help us, Obiwan Kenobi. You are our only hope.” As it turned out, Obiwan wasn’t the only hope. There as a New Hope, Luke Skywalker. Now, at 43, I learn that being the only hope broke Luke Skywalker. Its way too much pressure. People are flawed. All people. Your cause is lost the moment you make someone your “only hope.”

Star Wars: The Last Jedi could have been called Star Wars: The New, New Hope. The Force no longer depends on a single, skillful hero. The Force depends on all of us to keep the spark alive.

And so, let us take our moment of silence to honor the fallen. Obi-wan. Yoda. Han Solo. Luke Skywalker. Carrie Fisher. Our myths connect our past to our future. But our future is not yet written. Nothing is predestined. Our heroes fail. Our heroes die. They leave us with nothing but a spark and each other. It is enough. It has always been enough.

May the Force be with us all.

Recipe Not Written

Take out the recipe index card, the one typed up and laminated, rescued from the handwritten scrap of paper in the back of an old spiral notebook. Look over the ingredients. Preheat to 350.

Measure out the proper dose of mayonnaise. Two cans of cream of mushroom soup. Whisk four eggs. Dump in a bag of cheese. Crush the little cheese crackers. Bring five bags of broccoli to a boil, then carefully separate florets from their stalks. Pay attention. This step takes time. Allow the soft stems to participate. Keep out any tough, unpleasant bits that might poke or jab.

While doing this, listen to John Coltrane. His life’s work is the official soundtrack of gratitude and abundance.

Think of your wife sitting quietly in the other room. You have been together all of your adult life. You have seen each other at your absolute best and absolute worst. You still choose each other every day.

Think of your 10 year old daughter watching videos in the den. She has your sense of humor and is your greatest, surprising joy. So far, so good. Be careful not to screw her up.

Think of your mother and father busily preparing the main meal at their house. Wonder if they can know how important they are, even though you hardly ever call or stop by anymore.

Think of your brothers who live too far away. Wonder what their lives are like and if the sun is shining where they are today.

Think of your grandmother who is always ready for a visit and your grandfather who you never met because he died a few weeks before you were born. And the grandparents you knew but never got to spend much time with because you lived too far away from their kitchen full of quick wit and basement full of books which sometimes you got to peruse and pilfer.

Think of your mother-in-law who welcomed you into her family years before you realized you were joining. Her talent for giving the right gifts — small, clever things you never knew you might need.

Your wife’s aunt who died too hard and too young and how she made her life the art of perpetual motion and generous action. We sang Free Bird at her funeral, which was a time I felt closest kinship with God.

Think of your closest friends, these families we make for ourselves as we move through our days. How they think of you, notice your mood, ask the useful, difficult questions.

And the people with whom you work, who bring their gifts and talents to mix with yours to make good things happen.

Think of your students as they struggle and prepare to find out what they might become.

And the people in your neighborhood who wave and smile. The people in line at the gas station or grocery store who may or may not look familiar. You are in each other’s lives even though you can’t always see how or why.

Oven is ready now. Ingredients are mixed.

Place pan in oven. Set timer. Wait.

Enjoy the spreading, radiant heat of the kitchen. Notice the room you have made inside yourself to welcome this rich meal of shared abundance.

A Quick Word to Men

You don’t need me to mansplain sexual harassment for you. You don’t need me to opine about how the broken power structures of race and gender still warp opportunity for far too many.

I do want to say this one thing. If the #metoo conversation and the ensuing cascade of women finally coming forward to tell their long kept stories of sexual intimidation and aggression leave you feeling like men are under attack, you’ve been doing the man-thing wrong the whole time.

From Flame | Flash Fiction

She wakes up on the couch, the sour mash of regret in her mouth. It takes a while for her eyes to adjust. Everything is at a distance. Bleary. Far away. The clock on the far living room wall. She can see the shape of it there, marking time but she cannot find the hands.

It is daytime. The bright judgment of afternoon sunlight angling through the blinds. Late for work again. She groans, reaching for the pack of cigarettes somewhere on the coffee table, finding empty bottles instead. She prowls blindly through the maze of empties, sets them tumbling, rolling to the floor.

Leaning forward, she finds the cigarette pack. Empty but for one crushed cigarette in the bottom corner. She shakes it out, lights it. Breathes deep the stale perfume of her life’s disappointment.

This is too much. Observe without judgment. This is her therapist’s voice. She hasn’t been in several months. When something you are doing isn’t working, try doing something different. Also her therapist’s voice. Also good advice. She stopped going to therapy.

A few drags on the cigarette settles her into the day. The little light on her answering machine flashes. One, two, three messages. It is one thirty in the afternoon. It is probably Thursday though, if pressed, she couldn’t swear to it.

The place was a wreck but she had seen it much worse. Things out of place. Wrappers, bottles and food containers not yet thrown away. Piles of unsorted mail and catalogs. Things not dealt with.

She could deal with those things later. She knew she should call work, but five hours late. What could she possibly say? What was the point? They already knew. She already knew. She’d need to find another job, which was getting harder and harder as her list of people willing to vouch for her grew shorter and shorter.

Tell us the reason for leaving your last job. That was always the hardest interview question. “I didn’t leave my last job. It left me.” Things you could not say.

The light on the answering machine still blinking. One, two, three. It would be her mother. Her mother was the only person who still bothered calling. Her mother who would press in on her from every side, making sure she could not escape the fact of her profound, ongoing disappointment.

Her mother loved her and surely deserved much better. But her mind would not let her dwell here.

She put out the cigarette. The taste of smoke, as ever, too much with her.

She starts to think about that night so many years ago. The bright walls of flame screaming at her from all sides and the sound of her mother’s voice also screaming but from just one direction and she turns every which way but cannot find her mother anywhere. And her older brother, also screaming. He seems close, very close, but she cannot see him.

Alarms and sirens. Furniture, carpet and curtains burning. The entire world is screaming.

And through the noise and confusion, their mother’s voice calling both their names, bright with panic.

And then, through the chaos, their mother’s arms find her, wraps around her and lifts her out. They stumble together through the crush of smoke until they stagger together through the front door and fall to the ground. It is the feeling of being born twice, this falling out into fresh air. There’s the choking, the rasping, the agony of scorched lungs. And then the feeling that you are drowning in fresh air.

Enough of this. Push all of this back down where it belongs.

Get up. Do something productive. Push the answering machine button and listen to mother’s tired disappointment and worry. Listen to her wondering if she pulled the right child out of the flame.

In Happier Times | Flash Fiction

“Is this it, then?”

He knows from the way she is standing by the door, clutching that big brown paper shopping bag. She is there but not really there. Waiting with the posture of someone at a bus stop. Normally she would come straight in, bursting with conversation while idly straightening pictures, stacking coasters and sifting his mail and generally straightening his already clean, well-ordered apartment. It was her way. It was what she did, and he had loved her for it. But today there is no putting things to rights.

He watches her shifting uncomfortably from foot to foot, clutching that brown paper bag. She often brought him things, small thoughtful gifts like teeshirts from bands he liked or drawing pencils she had found on sale. Small, thoughtful gifts from a bottomless bag of affection.

Today she holds the bag close and closed tight.

“I brought you some things.” She does not look at him when she says it. Looking everywhere else around the small room, taking everything in with small, furtive glances. Last looks.

“Are you breaking up with me?”

She holds the bag out to him, still closed in her tight grip. He reaches for it and for a long moment they held it together between them.

“Your picture’s crooked,” she mutters, letting go of the bag to go across the room to adjust the photo frame on the bookshelf. It is a picture of them together, in happier times, not so long ago. There are few pictures in his apartment. All of them are of the two of them in happier times.

He opens the bag. There are no gifts. The bag is full of his things – drawings he had done at her apartment, a few of his favorite books that had made their way onto her shelves, a spatula, a toothbrush, flannel pants and a few favorite tee shirts. All neatly folded. All accounted. By his quick calculation, this seems to him most of the personal things he had ever left at her place all gathered thorough and neat, which were two of her many qualities he found most endearing.

“I kept the Zeppelin shirt.” She is looking out the window. “I can give it back if you want.” It was her favorite shirt, the one he had been wearing the night they met. She slept in it most nights he slept over, which made it his favorite shirt as well.

“Keep it. Keep all this stuff. You don’t have to do this.”

A siren outside the window catches her attention. The window is closed. She moves to see if she can find it, but all she can see is her own reflection in the dark pane.

“I know. But I do.”

“Maybe some time,” he says. “Maybe you just need some time. You could keep this stuff for a week. Or a month. See how you feel.”

He holds the bag out to her. She does not reach for it.

She looks up at him, and seems surprised a bit to find him there. This time when she looks at him, she does not look away.

“I already know how I feel.”

“Yeah, but feelings change.”

She nods. “That’s the problem.”

The siren is closer now. She glances through the window at the busy world five stories below, the night street full of business, hidden parties and secret emergencies.

“I should go,” she says. It takes the life out of him.

He sets the bag down. “Do you want your things?”

“I don’t have anything here.” And he realizes now that she was right. She had been slowly moving her things out for weeks. She had left before she was gone.

He reaches out for the picture of them, the picture she had just straightened. She moves closer to him. After years of hand holding, the kisses and caresses, they hug awkwardly.

“Take this, then,” he says, offering the picture of happier times.

She is slow to take it.

“I should go.”

And now she is not someone at a bus stop. She is someone actually on a bus traveling at high speed.

“I still love you,” he tells her. “I want you to know.”

“I know.”

And then it is just the work of crossing the small room, the last quick looks.

He opens the door and holds it for her, hopeful that something might change. She steps through.

He watches as she makes her way down the first flight of steps. Listens as she reaches the next. He waits until he can no longer hear her and then she becomes the story he tells himself for the rest of his life.

Feed by M.T. Anderson (Review)

FeedFeed by M.T. Anderson

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Feed by M.T. Anderson offers a dead accurate portrayal of our current moment dressed in the clothes of a dystopian science fiction future. This deceptively simple, clever story is the literary lovechild of The Great Gatsby and A Clockwork Orange. Anderson offers a unsettling critique of a society in decay that feels like today but is made strange and fresh through exuberant word play.

Feed is set in a future where everyone who matters is tied directly to the internet by a feed implanted when they are young. These fortunate kids are growing up in a world where marketers anticipate and cater to their smallest desires and where boredom and loneliness are never necessary. Except, of course, these kids are frequently bored, constantly dissatisfied and fearful the moment the feed goes quiet. Anderson gives us a generation of kids raised to fear boredom. Naturally, the pursuit of perpetual entertainment makes it harder and harder to keep boredom at bay.

I knew this book was something very special from the opening line: “We went to the moon to have fun, but the moon turned out to completely suck.”

I won’t spoil the story, except to say that our main character, Titus, predictably enough, falls in love with Violet, the weird loner girl who says awkward, true things and never seems quite to fit. I fell in love with Violet, too, which made this story all the more devastating. The story follows the relationship between Titus and Violet. Violet grew up in the world without the Feed and is trying to find a way to fit in.

Violet falls away from the Feed, and Titus is forced to decide in which world he wants to live. Like Nick in the Great Gatsby, Titus, struggles to become and remain self-aware while constantly yearning to fit completely in a culture organized against reflection and self-awareness. Titus is self-aware enough to sense that his internet-mediated life is missing something essential but he can’t quite figure out what that something is. There’s really no choice. He’s still a kid and the world is the world. Titus fails over and over, constantly struggling but coming up short. This was my senior year of high school.

Feed was published in 2002. I’m sure of this because I kept checking the publication date. I am astonished at how prescient this story is, written 5 years before the first iPhone, yet anticipating clearly our smart-phone obsessed, social media drenched lives. There is exuberant joy in the constant connection to friends, information, and entertainment, but the exuberance comes with a heavy price — distraction, vanity and, alas, the veneration of shared stupidity. Interspersed throughout are news dispatches about ecological disasters, riots over economic disparity and speeches from an American president who rallies the country with a program of nationalist consumerism. You probably know where this is going. We are consumers before we are citizens.

There are so many wonderful moments throughout this book. One of my favorite is Violet’s rant about the rapturous, life-changing wonders of Coca Cola. I have read few books that present such a clear-sighted picture of today dressed up like the distant future. Disorienting, disturbing and true. Must read.

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Fellside by M.R. Carey | Goodreads Review

FellsideFellside by M.R. Carey

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

A slow but rewarding build. Carey weaves several seemingly disparate, disjointed threads together into an ultimately satisfying resolution. I was most impressed by Carey’s ability to give physical, cinematic form to metaphysical concepts of dream and death. The story didn’t carry me along at first. I had to walk beside it. I was glad I did.

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