“Regret is an anchor I cut a long time ago.”
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In 1906, the US Government launched the disastrous Moonfellow Program, a top secret first foray into space and an opportunity to boost American civilization into a technologically superior future. Among the selected Moon-bound specialists was Franklin Crumb, a New Jersey-based gravedigger separated from his wife and daughter and forced into the project against his will. What follows is a moving, bizarre, funny, ridiculous, and poignant story of MacGuffinite and Moon Flu, slugs and conspiracies, isolation and abandonment, camaraderie and chaos, madness and introspection, fear and love, fate and monsters, longing and loneliness, time and presence, leadership and progress, failure and acceptance, and death and the dark side — all set in a sparse and inhospitable environment deliberately unconstrained by science-based fact (in other words, another brilliant Danger Slater bizarro fiction masterpiece).
Moonfellows delivers a witty, riveting, and masterful blend of humor, satire, horror, and absurdism that’s at once irreverent and nostalgic, pithy and glib, unflinching and existential, complex and straightforward, layered and nuanced, beautiful and sad, gruesome and creative, sentimental and memorable, desolate and claustrophobic, concise and farcical. It’s a mysterious, scary, humorous, and insightful tale rife with social commentary, original plot points, and interesting characters that gradually creeps and ultimately encompasses, captivating the reader as it skewers the callous, inept, and inane nature of power — a deep, rich, endearing, and astute account of home, humanity, and heart.
And the writing, particularly near the end, possesses an immersive, magnetic quality that makes clear the depth of talent, creativity, feeling, and skill that went into this novella. And yes, 129 pages somehow contains the entirety of storylines, characters, feelings, and adjectives this reader attempted to summarize above. Truly unique, extraordinary, and an absolute pleasure to read!