SciFi and Fantasy
SciFi and Fantasy

SciFi and Fantasy

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The Terror: Devil in Silver Makes a Deal in “Starry Night”
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The Terror: Devil in Silver Makes a Deal in “Starry Night”

Movies & TV The Terror: Devil in Silver The Terror: Devil in Silver Makes a Deal in “Starry Night” How do we feel about the ending that the patients of New Hyde received? By Alex Brown | Published on June 11, 2026 Image: Emily V. Aragones/AMC Comment 0 Share New Share Image: Emily V. Aragones/AMC It’s the finale of the third season of The Terror: Devil in Silver, and it’s time to bid farewell to New Hyde. The Devil is ready to make a deal, and there will be hell to pay if Pepper refuses. The finale begins not in the present but in the past. Dr. Walter is retiring, but he isn’t letting that stop his mission to lobotomize everyone he can get his hands on. This version of Dr. Walter is more confident and fired up than the one from the previous episode. The Devil is in his head now and ready to make its escape, only to be thwarted by Arnold Visserplein. So it jumps hosts. It’s clear, now, that the reason the staff were overmedicating wasn’t just that they wanted compliance or were understaffed and needed to keep them calm so they could do the rest of their jobs. The medications were a replacement for lobotomies. With Dr. Walter no longer around—and lobotomies being largely discredited by the late 1970s (although they are still done today, in special circumstances)—the culture of medically induced compliance persisted. It becomes as much a part of New Hyde as the peeling linoleum and out-of-date technology. As the Devil says, New Hyde was always doomed. If it wasn’t Pepper, it would have been someone else. What was going on at New Hyde was unsustainable. The real question is would the truth ever come out or would it slide into obscurity? If Miss Chris has her way, justice will be served. In the present, a hurricane is barrelling toward New York, Dr. Anand and Dorry’s corpses are still on the ground, and a handful of patients, staff, family, and cops are trapped in the Devil’s playground. Pepper goes after the Devil through Arnold, now a decrepit, unconscious old man in a makeshift room behind the silver door, the same room where young Arnold was locked away after his violent outburst. The parallels between Arnold and Pepper are striking. Arnold achieved what Pepper tried to: kill the Devil. But that victory was short-lived. Dorry’s warnings to Pepper were based on what she saw with Arnold. Pepper could kill the body the Devil was squatting in, but that wouldn’t stop it. Arnold probably tried to fight the Devil’s influence as well, but my guess is he was so damaged by the lobotomy (or lobotomies) and medications that he couldn’t keep it contained. The Devil consumed him, body and mind, until there was nothing left but Arnold’s rage. He went after the patients who wanted to leave because that was at the root of Arnold’s fury; why should anyone else get out when he couldn’t.  Image: Emily V. Aragones/AMC Anthony and Loochie go after Pepper, albeit Anthony takes some convincing. Loochie isn’t one to mince words, but it’s obvious they are talking as much about themself as they are Pepper. Both Loochie and Pepper are trying to change, and both need the people they care about to trust in that process. They can’t get better, in more ways than one, without the support of their families. Loochie makes the one mistake you never do in a horror story: they split up, leaving Anthony as prime pickings for the Devil.  As unsettling as John Benjamin Hickey is as Dr. Walter, he’s not all that scary as a Big Bad, well, not until he rips his face off. I prefer my horror of the looming dread variety, so I’ve enjoyed that aspect of the show. The downside is that the show juices the horror with too many heavily telegraphed jump scares. I am a big ol’ baby when it comes to horror. The first two seasons, there were many times in each episode I had to watch with my hands over my face, peering between my fingers. This season I don’t think I’ve even gasped once, even with the jump scares.  While the Devil is distracted terrorizing the patients holed up in the lounge, Pepper crawls back into the real world. In the wake of the massacre, Scotch Tape makes a bloody escape to get help. Which leaves Loochie and Pepper at the mercy of the Devil. Like Arnold tried with Walter, Pepper strangles Anthony. “I won’t let you have him. I’ll fucking kill you.” He abandoned his son once before. Will he do it again? Or will he set his rage aside? The show layers in flashbacks in a heavy-handed attempt to demonstrate his quandary, but the Pepper who is trying to change can’t kill his own son. So he makes a trade. He takes the Devil out of Anthony and into himself. The Devil, eager to get out, lets them all go.  An indeterminate amount of time later, Pepper is in a new hospital, one that offers him a solo room and consent-based group therapy. Loochie has a medication regimen and is drawing Van Gogh paintings in full color now. “We all got our demons, don’t we?” asks Pepper. In his case, his demon is literal. Dr. Walter chatters at him endlessly, but it’s Anthony that keeps him centered.  I’m still not sure how I feel about the ending. I think the show made a strong point about the horrors of this type of institutionalization, the kind that treats patients like Medicare ATMs. I appreciated how much Pepper’s success at containing the Devil relied on the patients working together. Loochie and Anthony going after Pepper, Josephine and Scotch Tape guiding the patients to safety, Miss Chris helping Loochie escape, Mr. Waverly using his only words to ask after Mr. Mack. Getting out of New Hyde went from Pepper’s sole prerogative to a collective goal, and they needed each other to achieve it. Image: Emily V. Aragones/AMC However, the hopeful ending seems at odds with the actual situation. Pepper is benefiting from therapy, that much is clear, but I cannot understand why he is still in a long-term, in-patient facility when he has no diagnosable mental illnesses; despite the Devil’s claims, “pathological selfishness” isn’t a diagnosis. If anyone should have been released during a review of the disaster at New Hyde, it should be him. It makes no sense to me logistically and in such a way that for me it ended up undermining the point. The people I actually want to see get help are the patients who need it, like Mr. Mack or Sam and Sammy. I’m glad Pepper is in a nice place, but aside from the Devil shouting at him and some anger issues, the guy is mostly fine. Fingers crossed he’s stronger than Arnold and able to resist the Devil long enough to starve it out of existence. With the Devil as a real entity instead of a metaphor for a corrupt system working as intended, it shifts the blame in an uncomfortable way. Earlier in the season, the question was asked: Did the Devil make New Hyde what it was or did it take advantage of an already corrupt system? The ending dismisses the question entirely. It doesn’t matter who was there first because the Devil is responsible for all the current problems. Remove the Devil, and things are fine. Loochie is thriving, Pepper is dealing with his issues, the new hospital is great. It bothers me to reduce what is a problem with how our system functions—how our society treats disabled people, capitalism, imperialism, racism, misogyny, medical abuse, etc—to a single malevolent entity at a single corrupt hospital. The horror is more exciting when a guy’s face is rotting off, but less powerful in terms of Saying Something About the World. The ending is satisfying in terms of the resolution of Pepper’s arc, but unsatisfying in terms of what the show seemed to be trying to say about in-patient mental hospitals.  We’ve hit the end of our journey. While I don’t think the third season came close to the high water mark of the first season, The Terror: Devil in Silver was an intense ride that I enjoyed the hell out of. Regardless, I’m just glad to have more horror on my television. I wonder what book the show will adapt for season four? Image: Emily V. Aragones/AMC Quotes “You gonna shoot us all, Paw Patrol?” Lol, get him, Loochie. “Lots of impossible shit going on around here.” “Nah. Fuck that.” I hear you, Scotch Tape. The Black guy isn’t willingly walking into a horror movie. Image: Emily V. Aragones/AMC Final Thoughts If you thought Dr. Walter’s 813 lobotomies were shocking, Dr. Freeman, who Dr. Walter is loosely inspired by, performed more than 3,500! The hurricane is unnecessary, in my opinion. The patients escape before it makes landfall, and we never see or hear the results of the damage.  Where the hell are all those other patients? Now we’re down to the core few, but two weeks ago there were several new faces. You mean to tell me after all these weeks Pepper still has his apartment? He has enough money to pay rent on a place he hasn’t lived in for at least two months?  If you’re thinking about trying Victor LaValle’s book next, do it! Fair warning, the book isn’t the same as the show. The bone structure is the same, but everything else, including Pepper, is pretty different.[end-mark] The post <i>The Terror: Devil in Silver</i> Makes a Deal in “Starry Night” appeared first on Reactor.

Gatto Teaser Trailer Gives Us a Very Feline Interrogation
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Gatto Teaser Trailer Gives Us a Very Feline Interrogation

News Gatto Gatto Teaser Trailer Gives Us a Very Feline Interrogation Mark Ruffalo and Laurence Fishburne also voice two of the mob-inclined cats By Vanessa Armstrong | Published on June 11, 2026 Photo courtesy of Pixar. © 2026 Disney/Pixar. Comment 0 Share New Share Photo courtesy of Pixar. © 2026 Disney/Pixar. Gatto, Pixar’s next feature film, looks like it’s a delight. We got our first teaser trailer for it today, and also the news that Mark Ruffalo (aka Bruce Banner in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, aka Dylan Rhodes in Now You See Me: Now You Don’t) is voicing a scrappy black cat named Nero and Laurence Fishburne (The Matrix trilogy) lends his voice to a mob boss cat named Rocco. The one-minute clip released today shows both of them in action, where they’re attempting to interrogate another cat, but end up getting repeatedly distracted by the cord on a light bulb, as cats are wont to do. The teaser also sets up one premise of the film—these are mob cats. Here’s the official synopsis: In Gatto, after years of maneuvering the canal-ridden, superstitious city of Venice, Italy, Nero begins to question whether he’s lived the right lives. Indebted to Rocco, the local feline mob boss, Nero finds himself in a quandary and is forced to forge a truly unexpected friendship that may finally lead him to his purpose—unless Venice gets the better of him first. Gatto comes from the team behind Pixar’s Luca, and sees Enrico Casarosa as the director and Andrea Warren producing. It’s set to premiere in theaters on March 5, 2027. While we wait, check out Gatto’s teaser trailer below. [end-mark] The post <i>Gatto</i> Teaser Trailer Gives Us a Very Feline Interrogation appeared first on Reactor.

Killer Jobs: The Knife and The Waitress 
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Killer Jobs: The Knife and The Waitress 

Books Teen Horror Time Machine Killer Jobs: The Knife and The Waitress  Your part-time job might just be murder… By Alissa Burger | Published on June 11, 2026 Comment 0 Share New Share Having a part-time job or doing volunteer work has lots of upsides for teens, whether it’s making a little extra money, getting some professional experience, or contributing to their local communities. They develop their organizational, time management, and interpersonal communication skills, and hopefully wrap up their workdays with the sense of a job well done. But in Sinclair Smith’s The Waitress (1992) and R.L. Stine’s The Knife (1992), this work might just be murder for Paula McLaughlin and Laurie Masters.  In The Waitress, Paula and her mother are new in town and Paula is having some trouble getting settled in. Paula transferred schools mid-year and everyone’s friend groups are pretty well established, she keeps getting busted for daydreaming in English class instead of paying attention to the assignments, and she accidentally made an enemy of popular girl Coralynn when she talked to Coralynn’s boyfriend Garth (though Garth says she’s not really his girlfriend). When Paula has the chance to get an afterschool job at the local diner, the Dog House, she jumps at the chance—she’d love to make a little money and figures it’s a good way to get know some of the other local teens, between her fellow waitresses and kids from school who come in to eat and hang out. Paula has never waitressed before and lies to get her foot in the door. Trixie—the owner of the Dog House and a long-time waitress herself—isn’t fooled for a second, though she decides to give Paula a chance.  Paula quickly gets to know the other waitresses, who are also her classmates. Virgilia (who everyone calls Virgil for short) is an academic all-star, working on a big computer project that’s going to land her a great college scholarship. Meanwhile, Cookie has other priorities, few of which seem to revolve around showing up for class, and she’s actually contemplating dropping out of high school to start working at the diner full time. Paula’s fellow waitresses are kind, patient, and supportive, but the customers are another story. Coralynn is a major thorn in Paula’s side at work as well as school: Trixie is Coralynn’s aunt and she lets Coralynn and her friends hang out and eat for free, while Coralynn goes out of her way to make Paula’s life miserable.  When Paula’s not trying to keep up with the dinner rush or avoid Coralynn’s abuse, she has to contend with a rash of bizarre and sometimes dangerous pranks going on in the diner. Someone loosens the lids of the mustard bottle and the salt shaker, which results in Coralynn getting mustard all over her sweater and Garth accidentally burying his hamburger in a pile of salt. There are threatening notes left on napkins and order tickets, cheery messages like “Think you’re funny? YOU JUST MIGHT DIE LAUGHING!” (23, emphasis original) and “Better watch out or you’ll have a bad accident” (73, emphasis original). Someone puts a steak knife in Paula’s apron pocket and she gets hurt when she shoves her hand in looking for a pen. Paula is sent to deliver a covered dish to Coralynn’s table and when she lifts the lid to serve it, she reveals a rat, which “seemed to be in its final death throes” (69) (though in the end, the rat turns out to be clever, if disgusting, mechanical toy). It’s hard to tell which of these bizarre occurrences might be Coralynn trying to cause trouble, which are fairly harmless pranks, and which may actually be cause for concern, an uncertainty that keeps Paula on constant alert.   The Dog House isn’t an isolated site of danger, however. The terror continues even when Paula is off the clock: someone sabotages her car by putting sugar in her gas tank so that she’ll break down on an isolated stretch of road, she gets threatening anonymous calls when she’s home alone, and someone throws a rock through her kitchen window. And Paula isn’t the only target: someone steals Virgil’s computer disks from her locker at school, compromising her project and jeopardizing her scholarship. Even going out for a bite is a dangerous proposition. The diner and an ice cream place called Scoops are the only two places in town. There used to be a drive-in, but it closed when a boy died there after being poisoned. There really doesn’t seem to be anywhere that’s safe, but Paula and her friends do their best, trying to balance school work, waitressing responsibilities, and just staying alive.  There’s plenty of high school drama at the Dog House, but Trixie isn’t actually much better. When she’s giving Paula a tour of the diner, she shuts Paula in the walk-in freezer, half as a prank and half as a safety demonstration, so that Paula knows how to work the emergency release in case the door ever accidentally closes behind her. Trixie’s mood swings unpredictably, from warm and patient to aggressive and sarcastic. She has little patience for Paula’s fears and says things like “I’m sure you had better things to do over at the high school than worry about a little thing like this job” (62). Trixie started waitressing as a teenager and dropped out of both high school and cosmetology school, like a darker version of Grease’s “Beauty School Dropout.” She has worked hard and now owns the diner, but she can’t help wondering about the life she could have had, feeling jealous of the high school students who work and eat in the Dog House, with all their talk about “looking forward to having new experiences, trying new things and meeting new people—seeing what’s out there” (74).  Trixie’s convinced that all of the teenagers look down on her and think they’re better than her. She’s the one who’s been playing the pranks on Paula and the others. One night, Paula leaves her script for the high school play behind at the diner and despite all the dangerous things that have been going on there, she figures it’ll be perfectly safe to run back quick all alone in the middle of the night to grab it (it definitely isn’t). Trixie corners Paula in the empty diner and tries to kill her, telling Paula “I’m so tired, I’m so tired […] Year after year it’s the same thing. A new bunch of kids from the high school. More part-time help to train. Explaining over and over and over again how to do this and how to do that. But they still think they’re smarter than dumb old Trixie the waitress” (123). So she has decided to make them pay. Trixie is the one who poisoned the boy who died at the drive-in, by slipping a slow-acting poison into his food at the diner to avoid suspicion; she was annoyed by his constant bragging about his college scholarship and decided to shut him up for good. She is similarly intimidated by Virgil’s intelligence and bright future. And Paula just seems to rub Trixie the wrong way altogether and decides to murder her—though with some quick thinking, Paula subdues Trixie and survives. Interestingly, Trixie’s mood swings carry over into attempted murder as well: when she realizes she’s not going to get away with it, she is overwhelmed and contrite, lamenting “How could I do all those things? Oh, no, oh, no, they’ll find out now and I’ll get in trouble” (123). It seems like Trixie probably has bigger problems than low self-esteem and hopefully she’ll get some psychological support after she’s arrested.  In Stine’s Fear Street book The Knife, Laurie is volunteering at Shadyside Hospital over the summer. Laurie and the other student volunteers do odd jobs, like helping with filing, running x-rays and other things to doctors, and delivering flowers and gifts to patients’ rooms. Laurie wants to be a doctor and she’s excited to get some hands-on experience in the different parts of the hospital, though her favorite place to be is in pediatrics. But it’s not all medicine and sick kids: Laurie’s best friend Skye Keely and a cute new boy, Rick Spencer, are volunteering too, so there are plenty of opportunities for fun and flirtation.   Laurie’s experience in the hospital definitely takes off any rose-colored glasses she may have regarding the medical profession. The nurse on the children’s floor, Edith Wilton, has little patience with the sick kids in her care and when she sees Laurie trying to comfort and talk with a scared little boy, Toby Deane, she tells Laurie “Don’t waste your time […] He won’t talk to you. He won’t talk to anyone. You’re only bothering him. And you’re in the way here, anyhow” (9). Later, when Laurie sees something suspicious going on in the new wing of the hospital that’s currently under construction, she goes to investigate and discovers Nurse Wilton’s dead body. Laurie goes to get help but when she comes back, the body is gone, though it gets quickly dismissed as a sick joke some of the doctors are playing on one another. Everyone dismisses Laurie’s concerns and then she is cornered by Dr. Sherman, who tells her “Do me a favor […] Don’t tell Dr. Brooks what happened. He’s just mad because I put a cadaver in his locker. If I don’t react, it’ll drive him crazy […] Just pretend nothing happened, okay?” (76), like this is completely acceptable professional behavior. Laurie keeps asking questions about Nurse Wilton’s disappearance but the official word is that she’s on a nice long vacation and all is well (at least until an ominous news report that a woman’s mutilated body was found in a crashed car nearby, who turns out to be Nurse Wilton … though this still doesn’t mean anybody believes Laurie).  Even when the patients are discharged, the danger is far from over. Laurie is worried about the young boy, Toby, who cries a lot and seems terrified of his mother. Toby says goodbye to Laurie as he is getting ready to be released from the hospital when he tells her that the woman with him isn’t his mother. When Laurie asks follow up questions about who she is, he says “I’m not supposed to say. She’ll be mad if I do […] I want to go home!” (33). Laurie is worried about Toby’s welfare and finds reasons to stop by his house (she’s selling raffle tickets for a hospital fundraiser), where she doesn’t find anything to put her mind at ease. The woman frequently yells at Toby and she physically abuses him. Sometimes Toby recognizes Laurie and is happy to see her; other times, he doesn’t seem to have any idea who she is. Laurie isn’t sure exactly what’s going on, but she knows Toby is in danger and she has to do something about it. She breaks into the house to see if she can find out more about what’s happening, is taken hostage by the woman and tied up in the basement, escapes, and then kidnaps Toby, heading straight for the hospital and (she hopes) help.  But much like Trixie in The Waitress, there’s not much help to be found from the adults in charge. Dr. Price, the director of the hospital, is more concerned with silencing Laurie than helping Toby, because it turns out that he has been running an illegal adoption ring out of the pediatric floor: his accomplices kidnap children, the adoptive parents give Dr. Price a bunch of money, and he gives them an ill-gotten child. Toby was destined for this dark fate and his twin brother (who Laurie thought was Toby all those times he didn’t recognize her) has already been sent to a new family. The cute new boy Rick also has a vested interest in this illegal adoption ring: Dr. Price kidnapped his little sister Laurie and he wants her back. Nurse Wilton found out what was going on and was blackmailing Dr. Price, so he killed her. Laurie’s aunt is doing an audit of the hospital accounts and has noticed something not quite right, so she’s on his list too. But first, Dr. Price has to get Laurie and Rick out of the way. When things get dangerous, Laurie still believes that she’ll be safe in the hospital, taking Toby there and trying to find help, which plays right into Dr. Price’s hands. He lures Paula and Rick in the under-construction wing of the hospital and tries to kill them to keep them from talking, but he’s not paying great attention to his surroundings and takes a fall down the open elevator shaft. Rick saves Laurie, grabbing her before she can tumble down the elevator shaft after Dr. Price,  and presumably all of those poor traumatized children make it back home to their loving families.  Teenagers sometimes aren’t the most industrious workers and to be fair, Paula and Laurie seem to spend just as much time socializing as they do working, but they do take their jobs seriously and do them to the best of their abilities. Rather than just going through the motions and doing the bare minimum, they ask tough questions, like who’s behind the terrifying pranks at the diner and why little Toby is terrified of his “mother.” And they keep looking for answers, even when people tell them not to and the situation becomes increasingly scary and dangerous. They want to know the truth, and perhaps even more than that, they want to keep the people around them safe, and they’re willing to do the hard work and take chances to make that happen.  Both Paula and Laurie find themselves in complicated situations that are much bigger than they are, ones that pull them into the adult world, whether they’re ready or not (and they are definitely not). In The Waitress, Trixie’s violence stems from her own insecurity, a perception she projects onto the teens who work for her. As Paula laments toward the end of the book, “Poor Trixie, you wanted to get back at everybody who thought you were dumb for being a waitress—and the only one who thought that was you” (124). The girls who work for Trixie look up to her, even if they don’t want to follow in her footsteps, but Trixie can’t see their admiration, blinded by her own fear of them looking down on her. The Knife’s Dr. Price doesn’t suffer from this same insecurity: he’s an important man, he knows people look up to and trust him, and he uses that faith to get away with criminal activities, certain that no one will ever suspect him. And for the most part, he’s right. He’s surrounded by nurses who defer to him and even Laurie is happy to turn her concerns over to him to handle, and it never crosses her mind that he won’t do the right thing (at least, not until he’s about to murder her).  Trixie and Dr. Price are very different people, who have made different choices and live different lives, but as Paula and Laurie discover, neither of them are infallible and neither of them can be trusted. Whether it’s because of a sense of inferiority or greed, the adults in The Waitress and The Knife don’t seem to have things figured out any better than the kids do. They do, however, have the power to make sure that others will suffer as a result of their choices, exploiting and abusing those who are weaker and more powerless than themselves, from the boy Trixie poisons to the children Dr. Price takes from their families. And as many a Scooby-Doo villain has opined, they “would have gotten away with it too, if it weren’t for you meddling kids.” Solving mysteries definitely isn’t in either of their job descriptions, but Paula and Laurie take on the responsibility nonetheless, holding these adults accountable, and protecting themselves and others.[end-mark] The post Killer Jobs: <em>The Knife</em> and <em>The Waitress</em>  appeared first on Reactor.

Safer Driving Through Science Fiction
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Safer Driving Through Science Fiction

Books reading recommendations Safer Driving Through Science Fiction Surely, issues like traffic jams, speeding, and road rage can be solved through these creative strategies… By James Davis Nicoll | Published on June 11, 2026 Paradox Alley cover art by James Gurney Comment 2 Share New Share Paradox Alley cover art by James Gurney The automobile! Arguably the defining invention of the 20th century, the production of which shapes whole economies. As is the case with any technology, cars are the focus of a considerable amount of public policy. However, real-world policy makers are limited by such plebian concerns as “is this even possible” and “will I manage to stay in office if I introduce this regulation?” Thus, for truly visionary solutions, one must turn to SF authors. Consider these five traffic issues. Traffic Jams Who among us has not been caught in traffic jam? Even I, who do not drive, have found myself in a stationary vehicle, trapped in a mass of unmoving cars1. Traffic jams have been a driving hazard since at least November 11, 1921, when an Armistice-Day-related incident left 3000 cars motionless. Since then, great advances have been made: in 2010, for example, China experienced almost two weeks of gridlock stretching over 100 kilometers of the Beijing-Tibet Expressway. How to manage this issue? James D. Houston’s 1964 story “Gas Mask” proposed a surprisingly workable approach. Commuter Charlie Bates is caught up in a vast, seemingly endless traffic jam. Air quality plummets and of course certain basic necessities are not available within motionless cars. Bates’ breakthrough is to accept that there is no solution, the jam may never end, and to adjust his lifestyle to that reality. Crash Safety It might be possible to make crashes extremely rare. However, the more people out on the road, the more chances there are for unlikely events to occur. Therefore, even if superhuman efforts are made to ensure that crashes are as infrequent as possible, the number will never be zero. Car design must take that into account. Gerry & Sylvia Anderson’s TV series Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons (1967–1968) featured an especially trying traffic context, given the Mysteron enthusiasm for engineering disasters as part of their convoluted revenge plot2. The Spectrum Pursuit Vehicle design reflected this: drivers sat in rearward-facing seats, steering the windowless car via telescreen images3. This would mitigate the effects of sudden deceleration on the SPV’s driver… although not on any pedestrians who got in the way. Speed and Distance Simple logic suggests that the less time one spends on the road, the fewer the opportunities for mishaps. There are only two factors that determine how long one is on the road: speed and distance between origin and destination. SF authors have tackled both. Rick Raphael’s 1963 Code Three offers a vision of a North America spanned by an advanced road system able to handle speeds of up to four hundred miles an hour. Alas, this vast improvement in speed is not matched to any commensurate improvement in driving skills. Therefore, it falls to the brave, often short-lived North American Thruway Patrol officers to keep the carnage to acceptable levels. No mundane improvement in speed would suffice in John DeChancie’s 1983 Starrigger. The starrigger routes cover interstellar distances. Conveniently, the so-called tollbooths (AKA Kerr-Tipler objects) scattered by a previous civilization solve the problem. Provided that the trucks survive passage through warped spacetime, they can simply drive from one planet to another as easily as we drive from Toronto to Montreal… if for some reason the 401 were to be subject to metal-shredding tidal forces. Autonomous Vehicles Even the best human is flawed. Human drivers ensure human error. Human error leads to mishaps. Removing humans from the equation removes the human element leading to accidents. That’s just simple logic, the sort of reasonable conclusion any Skynet or Colossus might come to. Among the many benefits offered by the Unification Council in Daniel Keys Moran’s 1989 The Long Run is Automated Traffic Control. Under the system’s watchful eye, passengers could be assured trips would be as safe as possible, not to mention completely documented by the world government. Only a handful of so-called “speedfreaks” objected. The manifest absurdity of their position was made clear when a million-car convoy attempting to circumnavigate the Earth in manually-driven hovercars flew into a storm and perished4. Communication Automobiles possess only rudimentary systems for communicating with other vehicles: blinkers, shouts, the one-fingered Mudra of Contempt, and so on. Improved clarity could only improve the situation. No gesture’s meaning is as clear as a gunshot; therefore, arming cars is an obvious possibility. Alan Dean Foster’s 1971 story “Why Johnny Can’t Speed” offers a utopian vision of a North America in which prudent drivers cruise the streets in heavily armed, heavily armoured cars, ever ready to use lethal violence to prove their right to be on the road. Tragically, Frank and Myrt Merwin’s son Robert prioritized maneuverability over armour or firepower. Frank cannot bring Robert back to life, but he can get a father’s just revenge5. Perhaps you have your own favourite science-fictional solutions to the opportunities presented by cars. If so, share them in comments.[end-mark] As I live in KW, I’ve also found myself in a stationary Ion, thanks to the tendency of local drivers to steer into or otherwise impede the Ion. The Ion is our light rail system, which I am sad to say uses neither ions nor rails made from light. ︎The Mysterons were annoyed by the high-handed manner in which Earth’s Captain Black (in an excess of caution) blew an entire city off the face of Mars. Annoying a vastly superior, exceptionally vindictive civilization turns out to be a bad idea. ︎Designers clearly had a lot of faith in the reliability of SPV cameras and telescreens. ︎Those who survived received death sentences and lengthy jail terms, as was the custom at the time. An interesting setting detail that I mention for no particular reason: The Long Run’s UN had weather control technology at their disposal. ︎Did Steve Jackson Games’ Car Wars ever cite its inspirations? Were either “Why Johnny Can’t Speed” or Ellison’s “Along the Scenic Route” among them? ︎ The post Safer Driving Through Science Fiction appeared first on Reactor.

Poetry From the Plague Pit: The Early Stories of Clive Barker and Joel Lane
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Poetry From the Plague Pit: The Early Stories of Clive Barker and Joel Lane

Featured Essays queer SFF Poetry From the Plague Pit: The Early Stories of Clive Barker and Joel Lane At the height of Thatcherism and the AIDS crisis, two queer British horror writers began carving out their unique visions… By Matthew Cheney | Published on June 11, 2026 Books of Blood Vol 1 cover art by Clive Barker Comment 0 Share New Share Books of Blood Vol 1 cover art by Clive Barker In 1984, the fifth year of Margaret Thatcher’s reign as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, two English men published their first short stories. Born October 5, 1952, Clive Barker started writing stories in 1981 as a change of pace from his primary creative activity at the time: writing, directing, designing, and occasionally acting in plays. Completely ignorant of the world of publishing, Barker did not know that short story collections are not considered a money-making prospect by publishers, especially not by unknown writers, and especially not when they arrive, unsolicited, as 600-page manuscripts. Luck was on Barker’s side, though, and in 1984 his stories appeared in three volumes titled Clive Barker’s Books of Blood. Joel Lane was born October 2, 1963 and had a more conventional literary debut. His first story, “The God of Clay,” appeared in Dark Horizons, a small-press magazine of the British Fantasy Society, and he would not publish his first collection until 1994, when Egerton Press released The Earth Wire and Other Stories. These completely different debuts would lead to completely different careers, and yet Clive Barker and Joel Lane stand as emblems for much of the best of British genre fiction over the last forty-plus years, and both, in their own quite different ways, stretched the limits of horror both in terms of content and technique. That they were both born in the month of Halloween is coincidental, though fun for any writer of weird and dark fiction; that they were both living as queer men in Margaret Thatcher’s Britain when their first stories were published suggests much more about what and how they wrote in those years. Joel Lane died suddenly in 2013, a few weeks after his collection Where Furnaces Burn won the World Fantasy Award. (He at least got to outlive Margaret Thatcher by six months.) Clive Barker is still alive and reportedly working, but health problems have prevented him from publishing any new fiction for many years. With contemporary politics taking a conservative turn, including fierce attacks on queer and trans people, now feels like a good time to look back on the early years of Barker and Lane’s careers. The stories they wrote decades ago still resonate, and those resonances suggest myriad ways the art of horror can bring clarity to our emotions, philosophies, and desires in times of trouble and fear. On July 3, 1981, when Barker was starting work on his Books of Blood stories, The New York Times published a report on page A20 headlined “RARE CANCER SEEN IN 41 HOMOSEXUALS.” In April 1984, scientists announced that they had isolated the retrovirus that caused AIDS, which two years later would be permanently named HIV: the human immunodeficiency virus. By the end of the year, there were 108 reported AIDS cases and 46 deaths in the UK, significantly fewer than in the United States, but the numbers rose quickly. Barker has said that his editor at Sphere didn’t want him to include one story in the book: “In the Hills, the Cities,” a tale of two men in a failing relationship who travel to central Europe and happen upon an old ritual where competing towns bind all their citizens together in the form of colossus figures and then attack each other. The story is one of Barker’s most original and astonishing; it won the British Fantasy Award and remains one of his most highly regarded works, prized by critics and fans alike. In Clive Barker: The Dark Fantastic (2002), Douglas E. Winter notes that the first draft of the story featured a heterosexual couple, but one of Barker’s friends pointed out to him that something of a homosexual undercurrent remained, and Barker brought the undercurrent to the surface in revision. Ordinarily at that time, this would not have been a good career move. An unknown writer of strange, often violent short stories was already going to be considered a gamble by any publisher. Adding in sexually active queer characters would be perceived as something of a book marketer’s nightmare in the early 1980s. But Barker stubbornly stuck to his vision. According to Winter’s biography, “Sphere published Clive Barker’s Books of Blood in March 1984, without any advertising, promotion, or expectations.” At first, it seemed that the books would take some time to each sell out of their ten-thousand-copy first printing. “But within months, propelled by entirely by word of mouth and an occasional review, these stories, originally published for a small niche audience, rose from the shadows and into the mainstream to become one of the true publishing phenomena of the 1980s.” Winter attributes this to Barker’s talent meeting the literary moment. Since the paperback triumphs of Rosemary’s Baby by Ira Levin, The Other by Thomas Tryon, The Exorcist by William Peter Blatty, Jaws by Peter Benchley, and the first books of Stephen King in the 1970s, horror was hot—but by 1984 the market was becoming oversaturated with low-quality work retreading familiar ideas and scenarios in mediocre (at best) prose. Barker offered energetic writing, imaginative imagery, invigorating angles on old plots, and, as with “In the Hills, the Cities,” some utterly original visions of weirdness and horror. His sheer originality within a genre that was aching for it is certainly the primary reason for Barker’s improbable success, but the fact that some of his characters happen to be queer should not be lost—in an era where white, heterosexual conservative political dominance remained strong but not new, a yearning arose (especially among young people) for any vision that could confront the cruelties delivered by a sadistic political order while also recognizing the world’s diversities of humanity. Mick and Judd in Barker’s story are not models of romantic bliss. (This is far from a story of queer joy!) Mick is a dance teacher who has come to perceive his journalist boyfriend, Judd, to be boring and arrogant; at home, Judd’s rightwing politics didn’t especially bother Mick, but now, outside of their familiar environment, it’s much harder to overlook Judd’s intolerance and xenophobia, although the extent to which this is Mick’s perception, heightened by Judd’s lack of interest in the churches that spark Mick’s curiosity, is unclear. Barker gives us a glimpse into Judd’s point of view, and we learn that Judd has begun to think of Mick as a shallow queen: “There was just no other word for him,” he thinks. “His mind was no deeper than his looks; he was a well-groomed nobody.” Mick and Judd do not find their way to reconciliation, new partners, or a conventional happy ending. They are destroyed by madness and gravity, punished not for their homosexuality but for their obliviousness to the dangers around them and, ultimately, their inability to get out of the way. Their sexuality is irrelevant to the old rituals and forces that determine their fate. At the end of the story, Barker, knowingly or not, echoes the famous conclusion of Anton Chekhov’s story “Gusev,” which follows the dead Gusev’s body as it is tossed into the ocean and falls past fish, then is played with by a shark, until in the last paragraph the narration draws our attention to clouds, sky, sunlight, and unnameable colors on the ocean’s water. Barker is more explicit with his meaning (more expressionistic than impressionistic) but the point of view is the same, like a camera zooming out to reveal the larger scheme of things: a dead body taken over by birds, foxes, flies, butterflies, wasps, maggots in a cycle of life and death. Names and opinions now have no more consequence or meaning than an exhaled breath caught in a breeze. The cycle of life and death continues with the rising and falling of the sun: “Darkness, light, darkness, light. He interrupted neither with his name.” “In the Hills, the Cities” is an early story, probably written before the horrors of AIDS had become apparent in Britain. (The first person publicly acknowledged as dying from an AIDS-related illness in the UK, Terrence Higgins, died on July 4, 1982, and it wasn’t for another year that diagnosed cases hit the double digits.) It isn’t until the sixth of the Books of Blood (somewhat confusingly, in the US, the stories in this collection were originally packaged along with the short novel Cabal and published under that title), written while Barker was working on his first novel, The Damnation Game, and published in the summer of 1985, that we get a story where AIDS feels like an unavoidable reference, even if it goes unnamed. “The Life of Death” is the story of a woman, Elaine, who has recently recovered from serious surgery for a life-threatening illness (something like ovarian cancer) and one day discovers a derelict church that catches her interest. The church is being prepared for demolition. She inquires of a strange, bow-tied man what is going on and he mentions a sealed tomb. Soon, the tomb is unsealed, and Elaine sneaks in, discovering well-preserved bodies in a plague pit. She becomes a carrier of the plague, though apparently immune to it—but her friends are dying. Anyone reading “The Life of Death” in 1985 would likely have thought of AIDS, which was frequently spoken of in terms of plague and divine retribution. Anyone who has had cause to pay attention to mortality can sympathize as Elaine seeks a philosophy to corral her emotions: the elation of surviving her illness, the residual fear lurking in her, and the anxiety born of knowing that whatever plans she makes, whatever hopes and dreams she indulges, are all fragile, all speculative, all able to be undone in a day. Romanticizing death drains fear of its power, turns the feared thing into the desired thing, and Elaine often succeeds at this psychological maneuver, but at crucial moments she must admit it is fantasy. When she descends into the plague pit, she must reckon with the physical remnants of death, utter materiality absent any art or glamour. No romance here, only corpses tossed on each other in panic and desperation, preserved by the sealed tomb but now rotting anew with a fresh influx of air. Elaine will regain her sense that death is romantic, but once again the story will show her to be mistaken. Following her experience of the plague pit and after her friends start getting sick and dying, she must preserve some shreds of sanity somehow, and so death becomes a great attraction, something she anthropomorphizes and imbues with romantic power.The story is sympathetic to Elaine, but also shows that her romance with death leads her to errors of judgment, and while her own end has a certain “Gusev”-like transcendence to it, it is not the death she thought she was on her way toward, but rather something altogether more mundane. The story’s final moments reveal that the figure she thinks is the embodiment of Death is no such thing, and Elaine’s end is hardly more elegant than being tossed into a plague pit. “Does it matter, though?” the story seems to be asking us. Death is death, a release into the universe. Elaine is a bit disappointed in herself, but, once she realizes what is happening and rises above it all on her way to escaping the body and its imperfect flesh, she seems no more or less content than she would have been had she perceived the real danger she faced. The endings of “In the Hills, the Cities” and “The Life of Death” may make us think of the daring point-of-view shift at the end of “Gusev,” but that is the only meaningful connection between Barker’s stories and Chekhov’s. Barker’s stories are more in the tradition of well-made tales by writers such as Guy de Maupassant and O. Henry. Joel Lane, on the other hand, was one of the most Chekhovian writers of horror and weird fiction, at least in the structures of his stories. In her history of Russian literature, Thaïs Lindstrom wrote: “It has been said that a Chekhov story is like a tortoise — all middle. The ending, never stated, is implicit in the frustration, nostalgia, loneliness, pretension, or despair of the story’s one brief moment selected from a life to illuminate it in its entirety.” Though Chekhov’s name appears nowhere in Lane’s collected nonfiction, and I have not noticed it in any interview with him, nonetheless, he brought to weird fiction (his preferred term for what he wrote) exactly the sensibility Lindstrom describes. Lane’s stories tend to be significantly shorter than Barker’s, more loosely plotted, less full of incident, less explicit, less conclusive. Reading one quickly, it’s easy to get to the end and think, “Is that it?” In contrast, throughout The Books of Blood Barker is careful to give readers gripping beginnings, incident-rich middles, and endings that tie up most of the loose threads. This more conventionally pleasurable approach to storytelling is part of the reason Barker’s work is vastly better known and more widely appreciated than Joel Lane’s. For all their differences, though, both writers found techniques for representing and working through the calamities of life as queer men in the 1980s and 1990s. They proved themselves masters of their approaches, and our luck as readers is that we can appreciate both and suffer no requirement to choose between them. Barker has long loved monster stories, using them to propose the idea that the creatures most rejected by the world are the most interesting and often the most sympathetic, an idea that would find its fullest early expression in his short novel Cabal and the film based on it, Nightbreed. It’s a concept that echoes throughout The Books of Blood, perhaps most clearly in “The Skins of the Fathers,” a story playing on tropes of the Western genre, where wondrous mutants are persecuted by American hicks. Barker’s monsters may do monstrous things, but it is rarely because of some immutable essence; rather, they are shaped into monstrosity by the misunderstanding, prejudice, oppression, and rejection they experience. While equally concerned with social forces, Lane’s approach is quite different. The contrast between the two writers is perhaps best described as the difference between a poet and a dramatist. Barker came to fiction from the theatre and his career has been rich with theatricality. Lane published books of his poetry and in 1993 won an Eric Gregory Award, given annually since 1960 by the Society of Authors for collections by poets under the age of 30. The creatures in Lane’s fiction are more mysterious than the creatures in Barker’s work—often ethereal, sometimes more glimpsed than seen. Even when perceived completely, Lane’s monsters rarely offer clear meaning or import. In his 1989 story “Albert Ross” (included in The Earth Wire), the title character is a young man who discovers that he is growing wings. He seeks help from the story’s point of view character, a healer named Lochran. There is no explanation of the wings, nor any great consequence except pain and ostracization for Ross. His attitude toward the wings is strangely blasé — they’re just one more burden he has to bear, and maybe not the worst. Just as we know nothing of the origin of the wings, we learn little of either character’s background. We know Ross lives at home with his parents, that his father is struggling as a spot-welder always threatened with losing his job, that his mother is consumed with anxiety, that neither parent pays much attention to him. About Lochran, we know even less. Why does Ross think Lochran is “a faith healer” and how did he find out about him? What other people exist in Lochran’s life? What are his desires, dreams, motivations? These are the sorts of details a more traditional (and theatrical) writer like Barker would provide, but they are not questions that interest Lane in this story. Instead of the standard details of character and event, we must think about resonances, atmosphere, implications. Stories such as “Albert Ross,” like many poems, thrive on juxtapositions, on the rhythms of images set one beside the other, on the subtle accumulation of sensation, and on the reader’s own imagination. Like the supernatural elements of many of Lane’s tales, Albert Ross’s wings serve as a kind of metaphor without a clear referent, unsettling our reading practices by denying the other half of the equation, unmooring meaning. But they aren’t a random weird element. At the most basic level, they serve a narrative purpose by bringing Ross and Lochran together in an intimate way that develops through the story and leads to conflict. (Lochran’s hands are as symbolically resonant in the narrative as Ross’s wings.) Unlike a more overtly dramatic story, the conflict is a quiet one between the two men, and it is not the result of their actions but rather their circumstances. Ross wants more from Lochran—wants love—but, enamored of Ross as he is, Lochran is a generation or so older, and he is wise enough to recognize that what Ross wants and what he needs are opposed. Neither man has anything to apologize for; they are trapped in a simple twist of fate. The ending is in some ways more conclusive than in many of Lane’s stories. Lochran’s time with Ross is over. (“He felt like an accessory. There was no organizing principle within him.”) Ross at least has some sense of definition: he is the boy with wings, the boy with needs. What does Lochran have, what does he need? He doesn’t know. And so, in his own unwingéd way, he takes flight. The next story in The Earth Wire is “The Clearing,” one of four stories original to the collection, and a rare science fictional story from Lane. It is set in a near future where a contagious cancer-like disease is killing people in great numbers. The shell of civilization remains, but the citizenry feels defeated. Youth gangs roam in search of goods and amusement. “The Clearing” tells the story of Martin, whose best friend has just died of the cancer, and who feels, like so many of Lane’s protagonists, adrift. His flat gets broken into by a couple of youths, and he catches them at it and asks why they are taking things. “Scarcity of resources,” they say, repeating a phrase anyone might have heard on the evening news during the Thatcher years. Lane’s stories tend toward bleakness, but “The Clearing” is among the bleakest. It unites a feeling of doom, loss, and anomie common to both Thatcherism and the AIDS crisis. The lack of any obviously queer characters in the story makes it a kind of thought experiment hypothesizing what a world might look like if all of British society were to suffer the oppressions imposed on marginalized people by rightwing cruelty and an uncontained pandemic. Early in the story we read: “A couple of years ago, the hospitalization of cancer victims had been made compulsory. That had been the turning point, Martin supposed: when a popular fear had been made into law.” Lane could be writing about the anti-gay 1988 law Section 28 there, but also of the push by various politicians and pundits to quarantine AIDS patients. The experience of many HIV+ patients, though, is reflected in a comment by Phil’s friend’s widow. “You know,” she tells Martin when he visits, “people say that they’re actually killing everyone who goes in [to the hospital]. Since they’re all going to die anyway. It’s a waste of resources to take care of them.” (Any number of tabloids in the 1980s could have run opinion columns arguing that care for AIDS patients was a waste of resources.) The story’s title refers to an urban redevelopment project to clear away the empty houses of the dead and make the future seem appealing, but the phrase resonates with various meanings through the story: clearing away and emptying out, certainly, but also with the sense of bringing clarity, making clear. What is clear for Martin by the conclusion is the need for community. Social ties between people have been shattered by fear and loss. The story ends with Martin joining a crowd on a mysterious walk to an empty parking garage, a place of gathering, where strangers can at least be together. The imagery is like an inversion and echo of moments from Barker’s “The Life of Death”—these characters who have seen so many corpses have gathered haphazardly to remember their humanity together. “What this gathering voiced was only a wordless protest against silence, a shared regret that mourning was impossible.” “The Clearing” has a similar premise to another of Lane’s stories published in 1994, “The Pain Barrier,” reprinted in his astonishing 2006 collection of stories, The Lost District. In “The Pain Barrier,” England and perhaps other parts of the world have suffered some sort of contamination that has brought about a new blood disease, “thin blood”. The country seems to be under martial law; there is a passing reference to the militia being indistinguishable from the roving gangs. The main character here is Lee, a man recently released from prison, where he was serving time for possessing drugs and illegal films. He is thin blooded, likely doomed. At a club, he sees a younger man he recognizes as an actor in some of those films, Tony. They chat and Tony eventually takes Lee to an abandoned building where, Lee soon realizes, one of the films was shot. They talk about the films, which seem to have mixed sex and violence, with Lee curious about what was real and what wasn’t. “The pain was real,” Tony says. “Even if the rest was fake. That’s why I went on with it.” Tony is smart and thoughtful (he talks about the German critical theorist Walter Benjamin, author of “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction”), but he is, he says, an exile. He had sought community, but found exploitation. Having escaped the world of the films, he no longer has the protection of the director who took him in, but he is something of a fugitive, banned, unable to get official work. Lee and Tony undress and have sex. Tony’s body is strangely scarred (rather like Albert Ross’s when he first meets Lochran). They lie together and fall asleep. In the morning, Lee wakes to discover their bodies have begun to merge; he pulls himself free and leaves, abandoning Tony, heading back to the hostel where he can get a transfusion to keep death at bay a little longer. AIDS is mentioned directly in one of Lane’s earlier stories, “Power Cut,” first published in 1991 and reprinted in his 2009 collection The Terrible Changes. That story is a rather obvious fable, the tale of a closeted gay politician, a hypocritical “family values” conservative who picks up a young man at a bar who turns out to know exactly who he is and delivers him into a strange fate. It’s a surprisingly obvious story for Lane, and its weaknesses point to Clive Barker’s strengths, because it is the kind of story Barker might be tempted to tell (think of “Human Remains” from the third volume of The Books of Blood, or “The Inhuman Condition” from the fourth), but he would have developed it more, given us richer character details, complicated the circumstances. It doesn’t work well because it’s not the sort of story Lane was best at telling, any more than Barker would be successful with an indirect, impressionistic story. AIDS was not an overt topic in The Books of Blood, but Barker would go on to write of characters dealing with it in novels such as Imajica (1991) and Sacrament (1996), the latter of which has a gay protagonist and movingly depicts the effect of the disease on communities. It was published just as a new cocktail of drugs became widely available as the first effective treatment for HIV. In addition to being queer men born in England in the month of October, Clive Barker and Joel Lane share something else—a mentor. Ramsey Campbell, one of the most acclaimed of all horror writers, supported and nurtured them both at important moments in their careers. In perceptive essays about Campbell’s writing (collected posthumously in This Spectacular Darkness from Tartarus Press) Lane repeatedly pointed out Campbell’s facility with moving between different styles of horror and weird fiction, mixing and melding as needed. Discussing what he calls “existential horror” (horror of human nature and mortality) versus “ontological horror” (horror of the alienness of reality), he writes that the “distinctive achievement of Ramsey Campbell has been to weave together the two traditions in a powerful exploration of what the genre can tell us about the modern world.” While both Lane’s writing of horror and Barker’s are in many ways more limited in scope than Campbell’s, the older writer’s protean example kept Lane from falling too far into the trap of traditionalist horror that arose in the ’80s and ’90s, and which he described in the introduction to The Terrible Changes: “No violence! No sex! No ‘bad’ language!” Despite the lyrical and poetic nature of his own work, he resisted such censorious calls to quiet, cozy horror. “Making weird fiction harmless and polite didn’t seem to me a particularly creative approach.” There, perhaps, is what most unites the work of Clive Barker and Joel Lane: In their very different ways, they show us how to keep weird fiction weird and horror horrific—how to use the harmful and impolite qualities of the genre toward creative, transgressive, artistic, and innovative ends.[end-mark] The post Poetry From the Plague Pit: The Early Stories of Clive Barker and Joel Lane appeared first on Reactor.