
Moderation by Elaine Castillo review – a twisted look at the tech workplace
Things look up for Girlie once William Cheung enters the scene, inviting her to become a moderator at Playground, a virtual reality entertainment platform newly acquired by Reeden. Girlie is a perfect fit. As the American-born daughter of immigrants, she carries a cloying sense of filial indebtedness ('there was an unspoken understanding, an ironclad cultural code: if you made money, you had to pay your family back'). With the family home under mortgage, the generous benefits package is hard to resist. And, because we're partly also in romance territory, so is the man offering it.
Castillo's celebrated debut, America is Not the Heart, was centred on the Filipino experience in 90s America. Peopled with nurses, doctors, faith healers, makeup artists, restaurateurs and DJs shifting languages between Ilocano, Tagalog and Pangasinan, the book opened a window on to a shadowed corner of American life, but refused to trade on trauma ('the gooey heart-porn of the ethnographic', Castillo calls it in her essay collection, How To Read Now). Instead, it honoured quiet, quotidian expressions of community and survival. But where that first novel could lean into self-seriousness, weighed down by the familiar solemnities of the immigrant story, Moderation has more fun within the genre – even if of a masochistic kind ('Parents worked all the time … Never been on vacation with my family,' Girlie says at one point. 'Never been to Disneyland either').
The book's twinned look at labour and immigration all but guarantees comparisons to Ling Ma's 2018 novel, Severance. But Girlie, unlike the Chinese-born protagonist of the latter work, is not haunted by memories of a distant homeland; her only longing is for her childhood home in Milpitas, lost in the 2008 market crash. The books' true kinship may lie in the fact that they both unfold against a backdrop of collapse: where Ma imagined a fungal pandemic, Castillo envisions a looming digital end time.
Playground's journey, Girlie learns, began with a keen interest in the therapeutic space. The need for funding then led it to merge with L'Olifant, a French theme park company showcasing 'French history to the French'. Now, with Reeden as a shared parent, the two are poised to transform the worlds of entertainment and healthcare – at least in theory.
Castillo cannily frames VR's healing power – from treating PTSD and phobias to providing pain relief and easing suicidal thoughts – within a darker tale of its co-option for profit, control and surveillance. Castillo is interested in the overlap between rightwing politics, tech culture and historiography. L'Olifant is modelled after historical French theme park company Puy du Fou, created by Philippe de Villiers, who is known for his Catholic, Eurosceptic and national sovereignty politics, and, in 2022, for backing the far-right candidate Éric Zemmour. Like Puy du Fou, L'Olifant is on a mission to make history 'fun' and 'exciting', even if it means ideologically rewriting it.
As the story unfolds, and therapeutic ideals, revisionist ambitions and corporate greed converge, Castillo has potent themes to work with: censorship, digital feudalism, the exploitation of biometric data for propaganda purposes, and the disturbing trade-off between principle and progress. Disappointingly, she seems more content to skim surfaces than probe depths. Her narratorial tactic of choice is to tell and tell – through flat expositional dialogue, but also the lazy shorthand of news headlines ('PLAYGROUND'S NEW VIRTUAL REALITY INITIATIVE: FAR-OUT FANTASY OR FAR-RIGHT NIGHTMARE?') – never showing, never dramatising. The characters, as a result, can feel like bystanders, idling on the tale's margins rather than actively inhabiting its centre. Girlie and William are interesting in their own right, but together, not exactly a match you'd ship. This is because for pages on end, the supposed romance between the pair lies dormant, only for it to comically whip into life in sudden bursts of passion. The novel tries to straddle too many worlds at once – thriller, dystopia, second-generation immigrant account, love story – but commits wholeheartedly to none. The result is a narrative that feels more scattered than layered.
But Moderation is not without merits. Castillo is a writer of razor-sharp acuity who takes seriously the sinister instrumentalisation of storytelling, in a world increasingly veering right. As a novel of ideas, Moderation contains terror enough to keep you reading, and looking for signs of the nightmare its author has taken the time to document.
Sign up to Bookmarks
Discover new books and learn more about your favourite authors with our expert reviews, interviews and news stories. Literary delights delivered direct to you
after newsletter promotion
Moderation by Elaine Castillo is published by Atlantic (£17.99). To support the Guardian order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
25 minutes ago
- BBC News
Wetin we know about Taylor Swift new album - The Life of a Showgirl
Taylor Swift don announce her 12th studio album, The Life of a Showgirl, afta fans begin carry rumour about am in di last 24 hours. Rumours begin fly on Monday morning, wen di marketing team of di singer bin post carousel of 12 foto wit di caption: "Thinking about wen she bin tok 'see you next era'." For di hours wey bin follow, Swift official website bin start to countdown to 00:12 ET (05:12 BST), wen her boyfriend, NFL star Travis Kelce bin confam say she go be guest dis week for im podcast, New Heights. Na Swift reveal di title of di album by herself ontop social media clip wey bin start before Kelce podcast, and dem make di record to dey available for pre-order on her website di same time. Fans wey bin pre-order di album receive message wey bin tok say dem go ship am before 13 October, but say "no be di release date be dat". Dem neva confam di official date wey dem go release di new music. Di 11th album of di pop star The Tortured Poets Department, wey dem release last year, bin break di Spotify record for di most-streamed album in one day. Shift from di usual way? To announce her new album for her current boyfriend podcast na veri interesting move for Swift, as much of her songwriting and back catalogue na about her previous relationships. Tori pipo bin carry di news well-well - even though dem neva confam am - say her last album na detail of her break-up from The 1975 singer Matty Healy. Oda former partners wey include Harry Styles, Jake Gyllenhaal and John Mayer na pipo wey fans tink about for a veri long time say dem be subject of her songs before. Di deputy music editor for di Guardian Laura Snapes, tell BBC Radio 4 Today programme on Tuesday say di subject of relationships fit comeback on di agenda. "E get one leaked photograph of, allegedly, di inside of di vinyl wey dey go around wia you fit see some wey no too clear, out of focus lyrics," Snapes tok. "And e be like say na some stuff about love. "Sometin fit dey about di situation wit her former label... e be like say she neva stop to sing about am." Di star, she add say dey, "famously give no interviews". So evritin her fans hear from her "na direct" , either thru social media or comments wey she make on stage in between songs for her big gigs like during her all-conquering recent Eras tour. New album just be like "an update on her life - wetin she bin dey tink of, wetin she bin dey feel", Snapes tok, di music editor add say e dey "really interesting" say Swift deliver di update like dis. "E be like say e dey quite loose - way wey we no dey really get to see her in public," di journalist add. "And I wonder if e go signal a shift for her media approach, or if na just her boyfriend podcast?" Snapes say she go dey "watch wit interest" wen di full podcast go drop around 00:00 BST on Thursday. Afta years of headlines during her record-breaking Eras tour, e be like say Swift get one-kain quiet start to 2025. For May dis year, dem bin announce say she bin buy back di rights to her first six albums, wey end a long-running and highly publicised battle ova di ownership of her music. Afta her original masters bin sell am, she bin vow to re-record all six albums, wey pipo kon sabi as "Taylor Version". To date, she don re-release four of di original six. Swift bin announce say she don buy back her original masters wit one letter to fans wey melt pipo heart, wia she bin write say di final two albums "go get dia moments to come back wen di time dey right." Di singer bin wrap up di Eras tour for December 2024, afta she play for 149 shows for 53 cities. For UK alone, she play for almost 1.2 million pipo, including eight nights for Wembley Stadium. Di tour bin generate an estimated £1bn for di kontri economy, and na wetin make Swift to officially claim billionaire status. Di star also get plenti awards, di American Music Awards bin name her artist of di decade, she be di most awarded artist of all time for MTV Video Music Awards and she don win 14 Grammy awards, including an unprecedented four album of di year awards. How she take big like dis? Her pandemic era albums Folklore and Evermore na significant turning point, according to BBC Culture correspondent Mark Savage, wit di indie-folk arrangements wey win ova critics and fans wey bin no dey impressed by her country and pop hits. Di rise of TikTok introduce her to a new audience, while di ongoing project of re-recording her first six albums bring back her older hits to life. "She be just one of those rare timeless artists wey dey get am right evritime," na wetin fellow pop star Raye tok last year. "She be complete powerhouse." "She be fantastic role model," Scottish singer-songwriter KT Tunstall add. "She get di resilience and di self-confidence to be di boss of ogbonge machine, wey dey employ thousands of pipo. To dey able to handle am and handle wetin dey come to her publicly, you just get to be a one-off." Lana Del Rey, wey bin sing togeda wit Swift for di 2022 song Snow On The Beach, bin get anoda theory about di way di star dey dominate. "She want am," di singer bin tell BBC News last year. "She bin don tell me so many times say she want am more dan anyone. And how amazing - she dey get exactly wetin she want. "She dey driven, and I tink say e dey really pay off."


Daily Mail
25 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Glamorous ESPN reporter given huge promotion ahead of new NFL season
ESPN's Laura Rutledge is adding an extra duty onto her plate in the fall as her football season is set to get just a bit longer. Rutledge, who is the host of the network's daily pro football show 'NFL Live', is set to make a move to the sidelines for 'Monday Night Football' each week. She will be joining Lisa Salters - who recently got a contract extension - for all 20 games the network will broadcast this season. They'll work alongside the No. 1 team of Joe Buck and Troy Aikman. This would include 17 games on MNF, one of the games in a Week 18 double-header, a wild-card game, and a divisional-round game. Rutledge told The Athletic, ''Monday Night Football' is the pinnacle and it's always been a dream of mine. 'I still get chills every time I hear the 'MNF' music. Really excited to continue to work as hard as possible to earn this role.' Rutledge, age 36, will still keep her roles as the host of 'NFL Live' and 'SEC Nation' The 36-year-old Rutledge, who has previously won Miss Florida, worked a few games as a second sideline reporter for MNF in the past. She also gave plenty of credit to Salters for her help to grow her skillset. 'To even see my name next to Lisa Salters, is an honor,' Rutledge said in a 2024 ESPN Front Row profile. 'For years now, she has been such a wonderful mentor and friend to me.' Rutledge is now on track to be on the sidelines when ESPN broadcasts Super Bowl LXI in 2027 from SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California. It's set to be the first time that ESPN will ever broadcast the Super Bowl. In addition to the promotion, Rutledge will still host 'NFL Live' as well as 'SEC Nation' on Saturday mornings prior to each week's college football slate.


Daily Mail
25 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Iconic 70s child star dead at 60
As Dee, the sister of Raj Thomas (Ernest Thomas) and daughter of Mabel (Mabel King), she was known for her signature phrase, 'Oooh I'm gonna tell mama!' She later reprised her role for the show's sequel What's Happening Now! which aired for three seasons between 1985-1988. In 19977, aged just 12, Spencer was involved in a five car crash in Malibu that killed her stepfather, Tim Pelt and left her in intensive care for three weeks with a broken leg, arm and pelvis. She wrote in her 2010 memoir, Through the Fire … Journal of a Child Star: 'I didn't even get a chance to say goodbye to my stepfather, Daddy Tim, whom I loved and who taught me show business as a young child in New York.' In 2004, she was diagnosed with spinal stenosis - a condition where the spinal canal narrows, putting pressure on the spinal cord and nerves - as a result of her injuries from the 1977 car accident. A surgery left her partially paralyzed for eight months.