So this story was published a few years before we actually went to the moon. By this point, everyone was pretty clear on what it might actually be like, but we were not 100% sure yet. So what makes this story interesting is that it is a "going to the moon" story written almost right up to the actual point that we did it for real.
But this is not a story about the first moon landing. It's more like the forth. The reason its the forth is because the last three landings ended up in a suddenly cut radio transmission... and then nothing. So in a very real way, this story begins as a soft horror. The horror, in this case, comes from the mystery of several lost astronauts on the moon.
The main character of the story is named Jenkin, and he is next in line to try his luck. He is doing it because he is obsessed with the mystery and is willing to throw it all away just for that one opportunity to see what in the world had happened to those poor astronauts.
Now up to this point in the story, you'd probably be on the edge of your seat. I was. I dearly wanted to know what had happened. Even if Jenkin is lost, the narrative is following him, so you get the feeling that you'll get answers even if we lose the main character. It's an interesting way to pitch a story, and it works to build tension. You, of course, don't want to lose Jenkin, but the curiosity is still there.
But here is where there is a slight problem. The ending of the story is steeped in the surreal, the strange, and the obscure. It is a weird and fuzzy ending that doesn't quite explain what is happening. It may just be muddled by the author, or it could just be an artistic decision. It's hard to say. But I read it, and I don't really fully understand the things I saw, or Jenkin saw rather, in his apparent last moments. I do think, however, that it is something best left for interpretation, which is what I am going to do. I won't be spoiling the ending of this one.
I think "Forms of Things Unknown" has enough merit to recommend it. People should read it, but do be prepared to maybe not really understand the ending. It might also mean something different to each person who reads it. But regardless of what you see and hear, one thing is certain: Jenkin found what he was looking for.
This blog was written on February 19, 2025.
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C.S. Lewis wrote a mysterious sci fi ending before it was popular in movies! He prematurely set a trend.
ReplyDeleteNo kidding!
DeleteGoing to the moon is exciting, because it means leaving Earth. Who knows what could happen? So, it is not surprising for it to be quite a surreal experience.
ReplyDeleteYeah, I still can barely imagine what it would be like.
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