"What Ned Said," by Gary Phillips, in in Hollywood Kills, edited by Adam Meyer and Alan Orloff, Level Short, 2005.
This is the third time my friend Gary Phillips has appeared in this blog.
I have said before that stories I like best tend to have at least one of four characteristics: great characters, twist ending, heightened language, or great premise. We will go back to that.
I learned a new term from this story: grief tech. As the British would say it is exactly what it says on the tin, meaning it is the use of advanced to technology to help with the mourning process.
In this story it refers to Ethereal Essence, a company which uses videos, text messages, and other mementos to create a virtual reality experience between the mourner and the deceased. The mourner here is Clayton and the deceased is his old friend Ned. They have a terrific session together - right up to the end when Ned tells his pal that he had been murdered.
And that, my friends, is what I call a great concept. A very enjoyable story.

No comments:
Post a Comment