[Book Review] Sorrowland (2021)
Vern has escaped from Cainland. She’s pregnant. Through the woods, she flees from her husband, the Reverend Sherman, and from the cult-like settlement she grew up in. Rivers Solomon’s third novel Sorrowland begins with unsettling thrills and violence, and it does not let up.
Vern, the novel’s protagonist, is a black teenager running from an abusive past with her twin children. When Vern eventually emerges from the seeming safe haven of the woods, her body begins to transform and the hauntings she experiences ever since she left Cainland escalate. As her body alters and threats around her close in, she befriends Bridget and Gogo, a Lakota winkte woman (a term akin to transgender). With her children in tow, together they learn the appalling truth behind Cainland and contest its ruthless human experiments.
Like their debut novel An Unkindness of Ghosts and the Lambda Award-winning 2019 follow-up The Deep, Solomon’s newest novel analyses systematic oppression within a speculative framework. Sorrowland’s readers shouldn’t expect straightforward horror or even horror-fantasy. It’s a difficult novel to pin down categorically: its genre-bending sensibilities veer from gothic to ecohorror to cult thriller but Solomon adeptly blends this mix-match. They cultivate its most pertinent elements into a cohesive narrative that, at its best, distills the gothic’s exploration of trauma and ecohorror’s penchant for body horror within the realist setting of an unethical government experiment that is reminiscent of the Tuskegee Study, Operation Paperclip, and others of its ilk.
Sorrowland is an unwaveringly ferocious novel whose politics and queerness are refreshingly unapologetic. Amid the fantastical transformations and fungal horror threaded throughout, Solomon paints an apt picture of a modern-day United States—as well as the anti-black history in which the country is rooted. The fitting anger that drives the novel is infectious: when Vern wonders how one might make the “millions upon millions who woke up every morning proud to be Americans” see sense, we empathize with her frustration. This incisive examination of American society is indeed central to the novel. The Blessed Acres of Cain, or Cainland for short, is a religious and political compound founded by black nationalists in the 1960s. Vern first imagines it began as a space for black people to come together to “save themselves,” where trade skills, education, farms, and survival tactics against the KKK form an almost idyllic community. The insidious heart of Cainland, however, unravels throughout the course of Sorrowland.
Picking up on a recent trend in horror and SFF, such as in Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia (2020), Solomon moreover explores mycelium’s connection that webs between people and temporalities, all of which return to Cainland. The hauntings that result are disturbing and visceral. Yet, despite the unethical government experiments through which Vern was brought to Cainland as a child, the strange manifestation of her body becomes an unintentional weapon against the forces that seek to oppress her. “The fungus inside Vern,” Solomon writes, “was more than an infection. It was the stuff of life itself, some ancient essence from an alien world, foisting itself upon her for its own chance at life. It was a gift, and it had chosen her.”
Vern likewise is no demure heroine. Self-described as unsentimental and contrary, her simultaneous capacity for love for her twins and those closest to her with her unflinching attitude carry the novel. Despite Sorrowland’s relentless and raw tone, Solomon marries its ferocity with moments of joy and compassion. These moments of respite, though brief, are achingly beautiful and spur an instinct towards survival. In addition to Vern’s devotion to her children that grounds the novel, the relationship that blossoms between her and Gogo is splendidly drawn; Solomon balances the emotional and sexual tension between two people falling in love with the dire circumstances of their lives.
At moments, Sorrowland’s pacing staggers—particularly after its opening scenes—with too many pages between action and answers to the novel’s overarching questions. Yet, though incredibly ambitious in its scope and content, Sorrowland succeeds. An impressive third novel in a series of powerful works, Solomon’s Sorrowland is a taut, uniquely radical novel. Bolstered by their exquisite language, versed familiarity with American history, and concurrently fearsome and vivacious engagement with speculative fiction, it confirms Solomon’s position as one of speculative fiction’s most prominent authors.
Rivers Solomon. Sorrowland. New York. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. 2021. ISBN 9780374266776
When people think of horror films, slashers are often the first thing that comes to mind. The sub-genres also spawned a wealth of horror icons: Freddy, Jason, Michael, Chucky - characters so recognisable we’re on first name terms with them. In many ways the slasher distills the genre down to some of its fundamental parts - fear, violence and murder.
Throughout September we were looking at slasher films, and therefore we decided to cover a slasher film that could be considered as an underrated gem in the horror genre. And the perfect film for this was Franck Khalfoun’s 2012 remake of MANIAC.
In the late seventies and early eighties, one man was considered the curator of all things gore in America. During the lovingly named splatter decade, Tom Savini worked on masterpieces of blood and viscera like Dawn of the Dead (1978), a film which gained the attention of hopeful director William Lustig, a man only known for making pornography before his step into horror.
Looking for some different slasher film recommendations? Then look no fruther as Ariel Powers-Schaub has 13 non-typical slasher horror films for you to watch.
Even though they are not to my personal liking, there is no denying that slasher films have been an important basis for the horror genre, and helped to build the foundations for other sub-genres throughout the years.
But some of the most terrifying horrors are those that take place entirely under the skin, where the mind is the location of the fear. Psychological horror has the power to unsettle by calling into question the basis of the self - one's own brain.
On Saturday, 17th June 2023, I sat down with two friends to watch The Human Centipede (First Sequence) (2009) and The Human Centipede 2 (Full Sequence) (2012). I was nervous to be grossed out (I can’t really handle the idea of eating shit) but excited to cross these two films off my list.
Many of the most effective horror films involve blurring the lines between waking life and a nightmare. When women in horror are emotionally and psychologically manipulated – whether by other people or more malicious supernatural forces – viewers are pulled into their inner worlds, often left with a chilling unease and the question of where reality ends and the horror begins.
Body horror is one of the fundamental pillars of the horror genre and crops up in some form or another in a huge variety of works. There's straightforward gore - the inherent horror of seeing the body mutilated, and also more nuanced fears.
RELATED ARTICLES
Happily, her new anthology The Book of Queer Saints Volume II is being released this October. With this new collection, queer horror takes center stage.
It's fitting that Elizabeth Hand's novel Wylding Hall (2015) won the Shirley Jackson Award; her writing echoes and pays homage to the subtle scariness and psychological horror of Shirley Jackson's works.
Penance is Eliza Clark’s eagerly awaited second novel following her debut Boy Parts, which found much love and notoriety in online reading circles.
However Nat Segaloff’s book The Exorcist Legacy: 50 Years of Fear is a surprising and fascinating literary documentation of the movie that caused moviegoers to faint and vomit in the aisles of the cinema.
Nineteen Claws And A Black Bird packs in plenty of sublime and disturbing short stories across its collection.
Gretchen Felker-Martin’s Manhunt, a novel that holds both horror and heart in equal regard, a biting and brilliant debut from one of horror-fiction’s most exciting names.
Moïra Fowley’s debut adult work is a shapeshifting and arresting short story collection which looks at the queer female body through experiences both horrific and sensual.
Bora Chung’s bizarre and queasy short stories were nominated for the 2022 International Booker Prize and it’s no surprise why.
A girl stands with her back to the viewer, quietly defiant in her youthful blue-and-white print dress, which blends in with a matching background
Hear Us Scream Vol II is a collection of over thirty essays from horror writers, scholars and fanatics. Touching on topics ranging from the monster within, to family values and reclaiming our bodies through horror, this is a deeply personal collection. Every contribution is meticulously crafted and edited, with care and insight into the film and genre being discussed.
EXPLORE
If you know me at all, you know that I love, as many people do, the work of Nic Cage. Live by the Cage, die by the Cage. So, when the opportunity to review this came up, I jumped at it.
When V/H/S first hit our screens in 2012, nobody could have foreseen that 11 years later we’d be on our sixth instalment (excluding the two spinoffs) of the series.
When someone is in a toxic relationship, it can affect more than just their heart and mind. Their bodies can weaken or change due to the continued stress and unhappiness that comes from the toxicity.
If you can’t count on your best friend to check your teeth and hands and stand vigil with you all night to make sure you don’t wolf out, who can you count on? And so begins our story on anything but an ordinary night in 1993…
The best thing about urban legends is the delicious thrill of the forbidden. Don’t say “Bloody Mary” in the mirror three times in a dark room unless you’re brave enough to summon her. Don’t flash your headlights at a car unless you want to have them drive you to your death.
A Wounded Fawn (Travis Stevens, 2022) celebrates both art history and female rage in this surreal take on the slasher genre.
Perpetrator opens with a girl walking alone in the dark. Her hair is long and loose just begging to be yanked back and her bright clothes—a blood red coat, in fact—is a literal matador’s cape for anything that lies beyond the beam of her phone screen.
Filmed on location in Scotland, Ryan Hendrick's new thriller Mercy Falls (2023) uses soaring views of the Scottish Highlands to show that the natural world can either provide shelter or be used as a demented playground for people to hurt each other.
MORE ARTICLES
Read All Marisa’s Articles
I can sometimes go months without having a panic attack. Unfortunately, this means that when they do happen, they often feel like they come out of nowhere. They can come on so fast and hard it’s like being hit by a bus, my breath escapes my body, and I can’t get it back.