In the acknowledgments of The Everlasting, Alix E. Harrow writes:
This is a book about love: defiant love, love born in a bad world and determined to build a better one.
This statement is simultaneously entirely true, while also being a large part of the problem with this story, right down to its very bones. The Everlasting is indeed a book about love, but it’s a book about love that tries to wrap that love around a message, a theme about politics and history and the telling of stories that build nations and enact violence upon the innocent. But because it is, at its core, a book about the love of a man and a woman for one another, its myopia renders it wholly incapable of handling those weighty themes with the care and delicacy they need to allow them to actually bring to bear the fruit of clarity. This is a book about love and, like love, it makes its participants inward looking and self-concerned. Which is fine, in many cases. Love can be wonderful, in the world and in stories. You just gotta do it right, and not hold it up as more critical than *checks notes* not building a pitiless, encroaching empire on the bones of a thousand years of the ill-used and oppressed.
But step back for a second, what is the book actually about, in the more granular detail? The story begins with Owen Mallory, a historian at a university1 in kinda-sorta-WW1-ish England (but with all the names changed and the imperialism dialed up a smidge more, if you can believe it). He studies the nation’s great mythological hero of a thousand years ago, Sir Una Everlasting, whom he has revered since childhood. In her honour, and in a sickening amount of patriotism, he perpetrates low quality history that shores up the ideological walls of the country’s self-image. Because of this, a mysterious book is delivered to him to translate, one that seems to be a contemporary narrative of Una’s life. He is, of course, hooked, and distressingly credulous about the whole thing. But when the book disappears, he is pulled to the office of Vivian Rolfe, the Defence Minister, and discovers there that his role is not to translate it, but to write it, as she sends him into the past to accompany the “real” Una on the fateful last story of her many quests in which she vanquishes the last dragon and brings the holy grail back to her ailing queen.
By following Una, by writing her story, Rolfe wants him to create the narrative of their nation – to hone the story of Una into something that will allow Dominion2 to become a mighty, unchallenged empire, held in the single hand of Vivian who will make herself queen. Owen is sent back again and again, tweaking the story, forgetting every time, until eventually he and Una realise what use they are being put to, and try to use their own agency to move their lives in a direction other than Vivian’s intentions. Cue shenanigans.
As the iterations of retelling and reliving pile up on top of each other, it becomes clear to the reader (and, eventually, Mallory3), that Dominion is a pretty awful place run by a pretty awful woman4. His father – a lifelong radical whose political protesting shames Owen at the story’s beginning – has been right all along! Oh no! He has fought wars against Dominion’s neighbours for nothing! Oh no! But it is only, finally, when Owen and Una are allowed by circumstances and each other to fall in love that he is willing to do anything about that. And here, the flaw (among many) – that love is what finally drives him to run and then to fight back against the forces of evil undermines the whole messaging about the necessity of fighting back. No matter what he learns, how jaded he becomes, Owen only ever fights or tries or learns because he loves Una. He does not become an opponent to the project of imperialist hegemony; he’s upset that it keeps on hurting this one, single woman about whom he cares. It is only through her suffering that he eventually learns to perceive the suffering of others, and even then only the people about whom he cares. And that, for me, is simply insufficient, as an ideological bedrock for a book so determined to be unsubtle about its politics.
The politics are, in fact pretty simple: nations use their histories cynically, making stories of their pasts to shape their present, crafting an image of some sort of purity or specialness to coalesce around. Bad nations, imperialist, crush-our-neighbours-under-the-boot-heel nations… but also the ones not like that (a related point not within scope of the book but which feels important to me; history with bias is not solely the province of the evil, it’s the province of anyone who has attempted the project of history in some form or another). Someone with a story to tell and a nation to make probably doesn’t care about the cogs in their machine, the grist in their mill, that is made up of the people who form their nation. Also “fascists are bad”. Not themes I object to, by any means. But we’re not in deep cut territory.
It is no surprise, given the pseudo-England and the project of ideological/national purity, that the story draws on Arthuriana for much of its aesthetics. But this too is fraught. Harrow picks and chooses what to use of the Arthur mythos and when, but never quite seems to settle on a particular relationship with it. It is so obviously Arthuriana, so painfully obviously, but she can’t quite bring herself to name it as such until right towards the end of the story (and even then only by evoking one character, not the whole mythological apparatus). When your story is about the use of a national myth for this kind of ideological project, I find that sort of hedging into plausible deniability rather undermining. It’s not like the real Mallory is about to sue you for copyright infringement, is it?
And the thing is, tackling the real Arthur mythos would also mean you have to tackle the real ideological complexity of its history in the mythic space of several nations, some of which very much aren’t England. That sort of complexity would have been so welcome, and I think would have strengthened the argument. But instead, we’re left with a world that just doesn’t really make sense, littered with the symbology of Arthuriana, all talk of grails and quests and knights and god and honour, but with none of the substantial underpinnings that make it make sense. Even the religion is odd; they’re Christian without ever naming it, and they swear “by Jove!” like an old fashioned English posho.
There are, however, two other ideological touchstones worth considering. Where the Arthuriana is an aesthetic being used to evoke the very English sort of nation-building storytelling and the insularity that goes with it, these two feel rather more foundational.
The first is Pygmalion. Which brings us in to focus on the eponymous Una Everlasting. As the story unfolds, it becomes increasingly clear that every part of Una’s life has been scripted or manipulated, whether by Vivian or by Owen5. Between them, they breathe life into a myth-historical Galatea with a big sword, and they both, in their way, fall in love with her. But for both of them – and critically, this applies to both of them – their love is consistently proved to be founded on something that they had a hand in creating. No matter what, even unto whatever ending she might be granted, Una is bound by the will of her two creators. It is impossible for the story to unpin her from her influences. And so the love – the defiant love born in a bad world – by which Harrow defines the story is just as tainted as Pygmalion’s is.
And again, were Harrow willing to let it be complex in that way, god even to let the story have an unhappy or fraught ending because the circumstances of its love were so unpickable, we could have had something genuinely interesting here. But no, whatever doubts either Una or Owen has about their love are subsumed by narrative necessity and it being really big and very sexy.
Then the second, and this the subtler one, is Omelas. Recent SFF is rich in named Omelas riffs, to the point where I really wish we’d stop. While this isn’t named as such, there’s a telling passage in which Vivian asks:
“Can you look at what I’ve made, Owen Mallory, and say truly that it was not worth the death of one woman?”
And Owen replies:
“Say it’s true, for the sake of argument. Say all it cost was the endless torment of one person. What is it that you have built, exactly?”
Is this not, then, an Omelas riff?
My primary concern with all Omelas riffs – one which I am firmly entrenched in my belief has yet to be disproved – is that none of them do anything that wasn’t already there in Le Guin’s original. Typically, they just lean in a bit harder on one angle of it, which I rather think spoils it. We already got it – they must have got it in order to spot the thing to lean on – why does it need making more obvious, exactly? This is, shockingly, no different. But while the conclusion is, naturally, that the suffering of Una Everlasting is not the foundation upon which to build this shining vision of a perfect nation, Owen’s conclusion is – coming back to my belaboured point – founded not on this being inherently wrong, but because it is this woman. Love, once again, rather than the better, stronger, really very obviously good ideological point. Sending one woman back through time to die in a bunch of horrible ways is pretty morally bankrupt, even if I’m not in love with her.
And then, the two intersecting. Galatea as the Omelas child, beloved and brutalised. They pull in different directions, and never quite add up to something that feels complete, or sufficiently encompassing of the wider reality of the suffering gestured at in the story, focusing just as they do on Una.
Owen, I rather find, cares just as little as Vivian for the bones upon which Dominion rests. It is Una, of the three of them, who holds regret and sympathy in her heart, and she’s the one who’s done most of the killing. I cannot bring myself to like Owen Mallory, as a character. He spends too long – despite apparently being a historian – blind to the horrors of his world, and even when he is forced by circumstance to confront them he can only do so through the lens of personal love. He’s not meant, I think, to be likeable as a person. But his position within the story is the struggle, and that’s the problem. I find him, within his context, hard to grasp as a realistic portrayal of a person, and difficult to read because of that. He just doesn’t make sense, and I fear – see Stew Hotston’s review for more on this point – doubly so for his context within the story as a man of colour operating within a racist society.
But while Una is, in many ways, the most sympathetic of the triad of main characters, she’s also the least complex. She has been – as the story repeats over and over – honed into a weapon, and Harrow writes this as robbing her of the will to agency, most of the time (right up even to the sex scenes, which don’t so much mess around with the power dynamics as just amplify them a bit more). Like Owen, her inaction is chiefly overcome when love directs her. She is grossly sinned against and wildly passive, and a story that highlights exactly her complex intersection of victim and villain could be genuinely wonderful. But her crimes as the weapon wielded by Vivian and Dominion are mostly ignored.
And then Vivian. What a glorious, messy villain she could have been. Alas, instead, what we get is Letty from R. F. Kuang’s Babel if she was also somehow Margaret Thatcher. Harrow gives her a backstory of genuine struggle, has her tainted by the very thing she avenges herself against. But because of exactly when and how this is deployed in the story, instead of making her more compelling, it just falls flat. I was too many villain monologues in, at that point, and too many war crimes, to really be swayed to a touch of sympathy by some girlboss feminism.
Frankly, the book is something of a mess. I am not generally a worldbuilding nitpicker (and shan’t become one here out of respect for the wordcount), but I found myself becoming one while reading out of frustration. The engagement with historical and mythic elements felt haphazard and cowardly, and the centrality of the love story obscured what could have been better, more interesting and more thoughtful messaging. The novel swings wildly between failure to trust the reader to grasp even the simplest allusion, and a tangled mess without any clear messaging at all. I found it, in general, a deeply frustrating read.
And yet, this book has received so, so much praise. I have seen it in the tiktoks and lo, in the magazines. I have seen it on the bsky and the facebook. It is beloved. But sometimes, it becomes one’s time to boggle at everyone else’s beloved, and today is my lucky day. I’m kind of mad about it. I’m not mad about it because it’s not very good, though. Well, not exactly. I’m mad about it because it epitomises one of the main problems I see in a lot of contemporary SFF: the determined unwillingness to let anything be subtle. All of this “Dominion” stuff, the point where she explicitly labels the bad actors in the book “fascists” like we hadn’t already got the gist so very clearly6, all of the repetition and labouring of the point, the bits where she gives Rolfe ridiculous villain monologues in which she demonstrates at laborious pains that she has not a single shred of goodness in her… it all pulls together into a belief that anything that felt realer, anything truer and messier and more complex, might have slipped the reader by. Even despite *gestures vaguely at the real world*. It is by no means all of it, but a lot of the big deal, big marketing, big name SFF of the last few years has had this problem. There is a stunning lack of trust that the reader can spot an allusion, put any thematic clues together, frame a single thought in their delicate little head and I am so, desperately, woefully sick of it. I hate, more than anything, to be patronised by my fiction. I hate being thought so little of that I must be talked down to, that I must have the message repeated to me three times until it sticks. Not just for my pride, but for what it says about the author’s approach to fiction (and ours generally, as an ecosystem that lauds these books). A book so determined to be patronising is a book that can brook no alternative reading, one that can leave no option open for a reader to find their own, variant meaning in it, whatsoever that may be. Holding this in contrast to the Tolkien reread we’re doing is staggering; Ed and I find different readings all the time and that is precisely why it’s good. Fiction is at its best when it is rich enough, deep enough, for variant meanings to live large within its fragile walls, and for the reader to develop their own unique relationship with it. Fiction is no good without the risk that someone can be wrong about it; let people be wrong, but let them reach it themselves.
This feels particularly apposite, on a day when Andy Weir’s Star Trek takes are floating around the internet and being roundly mocked. And to be clear, they don’t align with my Trek takes. But that he can have them, that he can have watched the show I watched, loved the show I loved, and found something so enormously different to me in it speaks well of the show’s approach, both to trust and to depth. I’m allowed to disagree with him (as I do). But he’s allowed to have whatever take he finds in his fiction, just as I am. Good fiction takes the risk that people will do just that.
And so, ironically, just like her own antagonist, Harrow is determined to make history appear to be one, simple, single thing. And it is this prioritisation of the STORY part of history that is the novel’s undoing. That it must be a love story, circling around these two characters and their inextricable history together, renders it a flawed approach to any of its larger aims, leaving the reader with an unsatisfying mess that can never bring itself to commit to the premises it sets out, but never trust that a reader will find something good and necessary within it without being led, every step of the way, by the hand, to that single, clear message. It is intensely myopic, and playing with the ideas of history that are the antithesis of myopia, the ones that yearn for a wider lens, and a view that understands humanity on the scale of nations and of eons. It is the love story Harrow wrote it to be. And it is flawed because of it.
- The university works like American universities, because we deserve no good things and will never be free. ↩︎
- Yeah. This is the level of subtlety the book believes we are capable of handling. It really is aggravating and it never stops being so. ↩︎
- Another unsubtlety. I’ll get to my problems with it as Arthuriana later. ↩︎
- I fear the clue may have been in the name, but hey, maybe that’s just me. ↩︎
- It doesn’t matter that he intends it benignly, he still does it. ↩︎
- Either do history or don’t, but shilly-shallying in and out of doing it so you don’t have to adhere to any sense of historical accuracy but also don’t have to build your own coherent world is the worst of all possible options. ↩︎







































