Review – A Better Life by Lionel Shriver

A Better Life

Reviewed by Jayson Gallaway on 3 February 2026 .

5 out of 5

A Better Life
Lionel Shriver
Harper, February 2026
(304 pages of unfiltered badassery)

Straight up, dear reader, I love this book.  Something finally that has the balls to ask all the seemingly unasked questions this rotten culture has been dodging since the borders started bleeding sympathy and the headlines turned into a perpetual guilt trip.

You know that moment when the polite liberal dinner party – candles flickering, everyone nodding along to the gospel of compassion while secretly calculating the equity in their house perched on “stolen” land – you know that moment when someone finally says the quiet part out loud, the part about how maybe, just maybe, inviting the whole world into your foyer isn’t an act of saintliness but a slow-motion home invasion dressed up in humanitarian drag?  Lionel Shriver doesn’t just say it…she loads it into a cannon, lights the fuse with a grin, and blows the whole goddamn table to kingdom come.  And then she rebuilds the rubble into a mirror, forcing you to stare at your own complicit reflection.

A Better Life is the novel we’ve been waiting for since the first cargo plane full of South American illegals touched down in 2022 and the talking heads started competing to see who could furrow their brow the deepest while explaining why borders are just lines on a map drawn by evil white men.  Shriver, one of my favorite contrarians, a walking provocation in sensible shoes, takes the premise – an actual proposal (never implemented, thank Christ) from New York’s idiot mayor to pay citizens $110 a day to billet asylum seekers in their own homes – and turns it into a domestic siege thriller that reads like a paranoid yuppie fever dream crossed with the sharpest satire since American Psycho decided to get political, turning her character Gloria’s sprawling Queen Anne in Ditmas Park into a bloated, creaking metaphor for the United States itself: a once-grand edifice, built on borrowed glory, now sagging under the weight of its own open-door illusions, rooms filling with strangers while the original inhabitants squabble over the thermostat and pretend everything’s fine.

I’m getting ahead of myself here.  So assuming my dear reader hasn’t read it yet:

Gloria Bonaventura, 62, freshly divorced from a husband who bolted for greener pastures (or maybe just a condo without drafts), flush with this inherited pile that’s more liability than legacy – she decides she’s going to Do The Right Thing.  Signs up for Big Apple, Big Heart (the program’s actual Orwellian moniker – Shriver doesn’t invent: she transcribes), and welcomes Martine Salgado, Honduran, soft-spoken, saintly-eyed, into the house.  Martine is helpful.  Martine is grateful.  Martine cooks pupusas that make Gloria’s mouth water and her conscience sing.  Martine charms Gloria’s adult daughters, all childless themselves, drifting through their forties and fifties like ghosts in the machine of delayed adulthood: one a corporate drone too busy climbing ladders to procreate, another an artist chasing grants instead of legacy, the third a perpetual grad student pondering the ethics of reproduction in a warming world.  They’re all barren branches on the family tree, a subtle Shriver jab at how the West’s fertility drought leaves us wide open to demographic takeovers, our houses – and nations – echoing with the footsteps of others’ offspring.

And then there’s Nico, Gloria’s 26-year-old son, the basement-dwelling slacker with a philosophy degree gathering dust and a vape habit that’s his only reliable companion.  Nico smells the rat from day one, but here’s the genius twist: he can’t quite articulate why.  It’s not racism…it’s this gnawing, inchoate dread, a confusion that manifests in stammered objections and half-formed rants about “boundaries” and “sustainability” that Gloria waves off as millennial entitlement.  Nico paces the halls, watching Martine’s brother Domingo show up unannounced, then Domingo’s “associates,” then a cousin or two, the house swelling like a balloon about to pop.  He senses the wrongness – the way goodwill curdles into obligation, how one act of kindness metastasizes into a full-scale occupation – but every time he tries to voice it, it comes out muddled, drowned in Gloria’s platitudes about empathy and shared humanity.  It’s Shriver’s cruelest cut: Nico’s impotence mirrors our own cultural paralysis, where calling out the erosion feels like shouting into a void lined with accusations of bigotry.

What follows is a masterclass in escalation, plot twisting like a knife in the brainstem.  Martine’s sob story about kidnapped children back home, a $30,000 ransom demanded by shadowy cartels.  Gloria’s frantic scramble to wire money she doesn’t have, dipping into retirement funds while her house (the metaphor ramps up here) starts to resemble America writ small: porous borders (that unlocked back door), overburdened resources (the fridge emptying faster than it fills), cultural clashes (Domingo’s crew blasting reggaeton while Gloria’s classical records gather dust), and a host of uninvited guests who arrive with needs that multiply like unchecked deficits.  The daughters pop in, coo over the “diversity,” then vanish back to their sterile apartments, leaving Gloria to foot the bill.  Nico tries to rally, but his warnings fall flat – too vague, too hesitant, too afraid of sounding like the villain in his own story.

Shriver’s immigration themes aren’t preached as much as they are vivisected.  She leans hard into the paralysis of her characters, especially Gloria’s fatal flaw: her inability – or unwillingness – to actually do anything to stop the unraveling.  Gloria could call the authorities, could draw a line, could say “enough” when the living room turns into a dormitory and the utilities spike like a national debt crisis.  But she doesn’t.  Why?  Because that would make her the bad guy, the one who turns away the huddled masses.  Shriver skewers this with surgical glee: it’s the liberal elite’s Achilles’ heel, this ridiculous addiction to moral vanity, where virtue-signaling trumps self-preservation.  The house-as-America metaphor hits peak resonance as the foundation cracks – literally, in one scene where an overloaded beam groans under the weight – symbolizing how unchecked influx strains infrastructure, dilutes identity, and leaves the hosts depleted, their own progeny absence or ineffective.  Shriver doesn’t demonize the migrants; Martine and her kin are survivors, opportunists in a Darwinian game, playing the system because the system invited them to.  The tragedy is in the hosts’ complicity, their failure to act until the locks are changed from the inside.

In an era when every novel about immigration either weeps piously or screams nativist slogans, A Better Life does something rarer: it laughs while the house burns down, then hands you the matches and asks if you’d like to roast something over the flames.  It exposes the hypocrisy of open borders from the comfort of gated communities, the way good intentions pave the road to domestic apocalypse, and how our collective Nico-like confusion – knowing something’s off but choking on the words – dooms us to watch it all unfold.

This is a book that will make people throw it across the room, then pick it up again because  they have to know how far she’ll push it.  It’s cruel, it’s funny, it’s terrifyingly smart.  It’s Lionel Shriver saying, once again, that reality doesn’t give a shit about your feelings, and neither does she.

Buy it.  Read it.  Argue about it in bars until someone punches someone else.  Then read it again, and wonder why your own house feels a little less secure.

Five stars, no footnotes required.  Though it I were forced to append one, it would be: finally, someone had the balls to write the ending we all knew was coming, where inaction is the real invasion.

N.P.: “Immigrant Song” – Super Sonic Temple

February 2, 2026

 

It is, perhaps, a testament to the sheer entropic force of the universe that John Simon Ritchie – better known to the constabulary and the terrified mothers of Great Britain as Sid Vicious – managed to survive on this spinning rock of sadness for as long as twenty-one years.  When he finally shuffled off this mortal coil on February 2, 1979, having ingested enough heroin to sedate a mid-sized rhinoceros with emotional baggage, the collective sigh of the establishment was audible from London to New York.  It wasn’t a tragedy in the classical, Aristotelian sense, because tragedy implies a fall from grace, and Sid never really had any grace to begin with.  He had a bass guitar he barely knew how to play and a sneer that could wilt flowers at fifty paces.

To understand the death, one must first attempt to parse the life, which was less a biographical narrative and more a series of violent spasms interrupted by periods of unconsciousness.  Sid was the id of punk rock made flesh – a walking, spitting, safety-pinned monument to the idea that if you can’t be good, you should at least be loud and possibly infectious.  He was the poster boy for a movement that didn’t just want to watch the world burn but wanted to be the one holding the match while flipping off the fire brigade.

The scene in the Greenwich Village apartment where he checked out was grim, but also possessed of a certain dark inevitability.  He had been out on bail for the alleged murder of Nancy Spungen, a relationship that makes Romeo and Juliet look like a sensible e-harmony match.  Their love was a chemical fire, fueled by codependency and substances of questionable purity..  When he woke up that morning – or rather, failed to wake up – it was the final punctuation mark on a sentence that had been screaming itself hoarse since 1977.

One might argue, whilst adjusting one’s spectacles and attempting to sound profound, that Vicious was a victim of the very machine he raged against.  That he was a lost boy looking for a father figure and finding instead a manager who treated him like a circus bear with a drug habit.  And there’s probably a kernel of truth in that sociological analysis, assuming the dear reader cares for that sort of thing.  But to reduce him to a victim is to strip him of his agency, however self-destructive that agency was.  Sid chose chaos.  He embraced the void with the enthusiasm of a golden retriever jumping into a mud puddle.

His death wasn’t just the end of a man; it was the symbolic closing of the casket on the first wave of punk.  The anger had turned inward, the nihilism had become literal, and the “No Future” slogan had transformed from a rebel yell into a bleak prophesy.  He left behind a legacy that is equal parts embarrassment and inspiration – a reminder that you don’t need talent to change the world, just an unshakeable belief in your own refusal to conform and a leather jacket that smells like stale beer and resentment.

So here we are, dear reader, decades later, still talking about a kid who couldn’t play bass, couldn’t sing, and couldn’t stay alive, but who somehow managed to become an icon.  It’s funny, really, in a way that makes you want to laugh until you start coughing us something suspicious.  Sid Vicious didn’t die for our sins; he died because he lived life with the safety catch off and the throttle stuck wide open.  And in a world that increasingly demands we color inside the lines, there is something undeniably, terrifyingly respectable about that level of commitment to making a mess.

N.P.: “Pretty Vacant – Remastered 2007” – Sex Pistols

February 1, 2026

I am in a foul mood this morning, dear reader…foul!  I woke up this morning in the kind of mood that makes small children cry and grown mean cross to the other side of the street – an existentially foul, sleep-deprived snarl of a mood – because I made the catastrophic tactical error of letting the puppy sleep in the bed.  A choice that, in the moment, felt like benevolent paternal bonding but in practice became a kind of canine waterboarding session conducted in hourly installments.  Starting at 01:00, the little beat launched a precision-engineered campaign of nocturnal harassment: toenail scritching, repositioning with the subtlety of a bowling ball, and the occasional full-body flop that suggested she believed gravity was optional.  The coup de grace arrived at 04:45, when a warm, unapologetic tongue made direct contact with my inner ear canal, a sensation so profoundly violating it should be classified as at least a misdemeanor in California.  Everything else is illegal here, might as well add this to the pile.

And but so anyway, in this state of bleary, half-feral irritability, I remember that today marks the death of Mary Shelley – who, unlike me, managed to produce world-altering literature while presumably getting more than ninety consecutive minutes of sleep.  She died in 1851 at the age of 53, taken out by a brain tumor, which feels cosmically unfair given that she’d already gifted the world Frankenstein, the primordial ooze from which all modern science fiction crawled.  She was eighteen – eighteen – when she conjured the monster during that infamous ghost-story challenge at Lord Byron’s villa, while the rest of us at eighteen were barely capable of coherent thought, let alone inventing a genre.  Shelly was a literary titan disguised as a human, a woman who understood ambition and monstrosity and the terrible of loneliness of creation long before the rest of us caught up.

I have a brain tumor, too.  It’s external, weighs about 6 lbs., is shaped uncannily like a chihuahua and is attached to my hip with the clingy devotion of a barnacle that’s read too much self-help literature.  It’s not fatal, but it can be loud, and it is responsible for the fact that I am typing this with the emotional stability of a Victorian ghost.

I hate this goddamn dog right now.

The calendar, in its infinite appetite for chaos, also reminds us that February 1 marks the first proven murder committed by Ted Bundy in 1974.  Proven being the operative word, since Bundy’s whole biography is basically a Choose Your Own Nightmare of unconfirmed horrors.  On this night, he broke into the basement apartment of Lynda Ann Healy in Seattle, bludgeoned her unconscious, and abducted her.  Her remains wouldn’t be found for a year, a grim punctuation mark on a story that was already too bleak to bear.  Bundy is the kind of guy who forces you to confront the abyss with no guarantee the abyss won’t wink back.

And honestly – given my current state of sleep deprivation – I’m starting to suspect that Bundy’s entire homicidal career might have been catalyzed by a dog that wouldn’t let him sleep either.  I’m not saying it excuses anything (it does not), but I am saying that after being woken up every hour on the hour by a creature who weighs less than a Thanksgiving turkey, I understand how a person’s grip on sanity can begin to fray like a Temu extension cord.

I just burned my tongue on the tea.  Fucking dog.

Which brings us back to the present moment, for good or ill: me, the puppy, the lingering psychic residue of Mary Shelley’s genius, and the grim anniversary of Bundy’s first confirmed atrocity.  All braided together in the strange, sleepless braid of February 1.  Honestly, after the night I’ve just endured, I’m starting to understand the primal murderous rage that can brew in the heart of a man denied the sweet oblivion of unconsciousness.  Just saying, if I see one more dog-shaped shadow, or hear one more soft, wet sound, somebody’s gonna pay.  And it won’t be me.  Or Mary Shelley.  Or, probably, Bundy.  But someone.  Someone will pay.

Okay, fuck it: the puppy is snoring again.  I’m wide awake.  The monster in my head is probably just caffeine withdrawal and sleep debt, probably.  But if it starts whispering in German about galvanism and reanimation, I’m calling it quits and moving to Geneva.  Or at least to the couch.  Maybe I’ll sleep, maybe I won’t.  The hour hand keeps moving either way.

N.P.: “Sellf Help” – Offbeat, Greg Blackman

January 31, 2026

Hot damn, dear reader…today we raise a whole goddamn bottle to Norman Kingsley Mailer, the literary titan who swaggered into the world on this day in 1923 (the same year my father was born) and spent the next 84 years punching, writing, and philosophizing his way into the annals of American letters. There are certain figures in the literary cosmos – cosmos here meaning that sprawling, barely governable constellation of egos, neuroses, and typewriter shrapnel – whose birthdays feel less like commemorations and more like controlled detonations.  Mailer was a force of nature, a human hurricane of ego, intellect, and testosterone who made it his business to provoke, challenge, and occasionally terrify anyone who dared stand in his way.

Mailer was an absolute badass.  Not the Instagram-filtered, hashtagged kind, but the real fucking deal – the kind who wrote like his typewriter was on fire and lived like he had a personal vendetta against boredom.  This is the man who gave us The Naked and the Dead, a WWII novel so raw it smells like gunpowder and sweat.  He followed that up with The Executioner’s Song, a Pulitzer-winning masterpiece that turned the grim, true-crime story of Gary Gilmore into a sprawling, novelistic epic.

Mailer dissected the human condition with the precision of a surgeon and the brutality of a barroom brawler.

Mailer wasn’t just about the words.  He was a walking, talking, headline-generating spectacle.  He ran for the mayor of New York City (on a platform that included seceding the city from the state), headbutted his way through literary feuds, and once famously decked a critic at a  party.  He was the kind of guy who could charm you with a perfectly turned phrase one minute and make you want to throw a drink in his face the next.

Mailer’s genius (and his madness) lay in his refusal to play it safe.  He bulldozed boundaries, set them on fire, and then wrote a 10,000-word essay about the ashes.  He was a pioneer of New Journalism, blending fact and fiction in a way that made journalistic purists clutch their pearls and readers care more deeply about the stories.  He was a messy, complicated, infuriating pain in the ass, but he was never boring.

So here’s to the man who turned literature into a compact sport, who made us think, argue, and occasionally cringe, and who reminded us that great writing isn’t about being polite – it’s about being alive.

Happy birthday, Mr. Mailer

N.P.: “Smack My Bitch Up” – Aytkact

January 27, 2026

 

Welp, here we are again, dear reader, another Tuesday spinning around the sun on this mud-ball of consequence and cheap wine, and the calendar, that merciless tick-tocking ledger of our own slow decay, informs us that it is January 27th.  A day that would, if I were in charge of things, be a global holiday of mandatory, state-sponsored debauchery.  Why? Because on this day, back in 1756, the heavens smiled (maybe smirked) down at humanity, and out popped – fully formed, one assumes, with a tiny powdered wig and a head full of symphonies that would make angels weep into their celestial cognacs – one Johannes Chrysostomus Wolfgangus Theophilus Mozart.  [Preemptive response to any snarky freshman insisting Mozart’s middle name was Amadeus…you’re not wrong: it’s in there.  “Theophilus” translates to “lover of God” or “beloved of God,” which he often rendered as “Amadeus” in Latin.  Now quit whining and pay attention.]

Wolfie.  The Kid from Salzburg, that smug little Archbishopric town, a baroque snow-globe of a city that probably didn’t deserve the cosmic anomaly it was hosting.  This was the starting block of a thirty-five-year rampage of such concentrated, supernova-grade talent that it still scorches the ears and baffles the mind.  Almost instantly beyond merely composing music, he mainlined the divine, scribbling down dispatches from a dimension the rest of us can only glimpse in our most profound moments of chemical or emotional excess.  He committed a kind of ecstatic arson on the very idea of what music was supposed to be, torching the rulebook while humming counterpoint so perfect it bishops shit and aristocrats rethink their live choices.  Dude was basically a human high-pressure hose of melody, spraying the 18th century with a recursive, self-referential brilliance that, frankly, most dear readers are too intellectually malnourished to even process.  He spat out concertos like sunflower seeds.  He tossed off operas that contained more human truth in a single aria than most novels manage in 400 pages of tortured prose.  All this while navigating the powdered, perfumed, and profoundly perilous viper pit of Viennese court society.  It’s been 270 years of the little bastards ghost still owning the room, still making every  subsequent composer sound like they’re trying to hot-wire a harpsichord in the back of a stolen carriage while Mozart’s already three towns ahead, laughing in perfect sonata form.  You listen to the Jupiter Symphony or the Requiem and you realize the rest of us are just dicking around with tuning forks while he was out there rewriting the laws of emotional physics.

And then, the flameout.  The big, ugly stop.  Thirty-five.  An age when most of us are just starting to figure out how to properly file our taxes, Mozart was already a legend being shoveled into a pauper’s grave.  The official story is as thin as cheap soup, some horseshit about a fever.  But we know better, don’t we, dear reader?  The darkness that always nibbled at the edges of his brightest compositions finally came to collect.

Was it Salieri, the patron saint of mediocrity, finally succumbing to a fit of murderous envy?  A plausible, almost operatic, narrative.  Or was it something more sordid, more human?  A bad plate of pork, a dose of trichinosis turning his guts into a warzone?  A grimly ironic end for a man who lived his life at forte fortissimo. Or maybe it was mercury, the fashionable cure-all of the day, a slow-acting poison administered by a jealous husband or a quack doctor.  Regardless, we know it was no grand operatic exit, no dramatic farewell aria – just a genius reduced to a shivering, swollen husk in a rented room while the city outside kept right on waltzing without him.

But here we are, centuries later, still blasting his stuff in concert halls and headphones and car stereos at 3 a.m. when the world feels too stupid to live in.  The music doesn’t age, doesn’t date, doesn’t give a flying fuck about your theories or your playlists or your fragile ego; it just sits there, eternal and smug, daring you to keep up.

So today, raise a toast to the Wolf…not of some polite Riesling, but of something with a kick: whiskey, cheap red, black coffee laced with spite.  Happy birthday, Wolfie.  He burned twice as bright, and if he only lasted half as long, well, maybe that was the point.  He crammed a hundred lifetimes of pure, uncut genius into three and a half decades, leaving behind a body of work so perfect, so impossible, that it serves as a permanent middle finger to the quiet desperation of an ordinary life.  (And if you’re reading this while some string quartet is sawing through Eine Kleine Nachtmusik in the background, crank it louder.  Let the uncultured heathens next door know the dead genius is still winning).

N.P.: “Mozart” – Trans Siberian Orchestra

January 26, 2026

What a night, dear reader.  It’s tough being me some nights.  Legitimately difficult.  And last night was one such night.
Unlike the previous decade, which saw me getting 2-4 hours of sleep a night at the most, my sleep hygiene in the ’20s has been immaculate.  My Apple Watch regularly kisses my ass over meeting my 7-hour/night sleep goal.  But sometimes, every couple of weeks or so, things don’t go as planned.  There’s no secret to it: it’s all very obviously the fault of my overactive mind.

Last night, I very responsibly turned off the show I was watching at the appropriate time, and headed to bed.  I should have been asleep no more than an hour later, but an hour and fifteen later, I was still quite awake.  It was around that exact time that I decided I really needed a Dodge Challenger.  But a quick bit of research left me heartbroken…Dodge quit manufacturing new Challengers in 2023.  “Son of a bitch!” I said, out loud, upsetting everybody else in the bed, who were already asleep.  I was upset, so, not wanting to further disturb anyone else’s slumber, I got out of bed, went to the other room, and looked out the window at the fog.  That made me feel better, and made me think of Lovecraft and Poe.  It also reminded me that the new Dracula movie comes out in the States on February 6.  This, too, improved my mood.  But it did nothing to slow down my mind.  Which mind then jumped suddenly to W.H. Auden, most likely because I’ve been reading some of his poetry recently.  I thought about some stories of eccentricities one of my professors in college had told me about when Auden had stayed at his house for a couple of days.  It then occurred to me that there had been no feature film or biopic yet made based on Mr. Auden, and that a) it was high time one was, b) I was the person to write the script, and c) the time to do that was right this very sleepless second.  So I went into the studio and got to work.

I’d recently finished reading Carpenter’s biography of Auden, so things moved quickly.  It would be called “The Necessary Angel.”  It would be Tár meets The Imitation Game, and would have lots of smoky rooms, cigarette ash, opera rehearsals, and political arguments, and it would center around this poet who lived like a storm cloud with a library card.  Brilliant!  Smoky, cerebral, and emotionally jagged.  Great…time to outline:

Act I – The Making of a Monster
1.     Prologue: The Old Lion
Opening in 1972, Auden in his final years: disheveled, brilliant, chain-smoking, lecturing in a Vienna classroom.  He begins reading a poem – then stops, pissed off, muttering that he “no longer believes a word of it”  Cut to black.

2.      Childhood in Birmingham
Auden as a pretty weird kid, obsessed with mining equipment and reciting Icelandic sagas.

3.      Oxford: The Young Genius
Auden arrives at Oxford and immediately becomes the weirdest, smartest, most magnetic student in the room.  He meets Christopher Isherwood, who becomes his mentor, lover, and co-conspirator.

4.     The Auden Group
Auden, Isherwood, Spender, and MacNeice form a literary group that feels like a punk band of the 1930s.  The write, argue, drink, and reinvent modern poetry.  Auden becomes the reluctant leader, which he both hates and secretly loves.

5.     Spain and Disillusionment
Auden goes to Spain to check out the Civil War and hopefully get some moral clarity.  Instead he finds chaos, propaganda, and his own political ignorance.

This was going just swimmingly.  If the next two acts went as smoothly and quickly as this opener, I’d have a saleable treatment by dawn.  But there was a problem…when I originally got out of bed to go look at the fog, I popped a lightweight muscle relaxer, which was suddenly kicking in.  Shit…I may not have until dawn.  Whatever…a couple of notes about casting this fucker.
W.H. Auden will be played by Andrew Scott.  Not because he looks like Auden (he doesn’t), but because he does razor-sharp intellect, emotional volatility and dry, surgical wit better than anyone.  He also has a strange mix of shyness and arrogance that I appreciate, that Auden seemed to radiate.  Especially in his work in Sherlock, he has the uncanny ability to make genius feel truly dangerous.  All that, and I just think Andrew Scott should be in everything.
Ben Wishaw would be great as Christopher Isherwood.  And Cate Blanchett would have to be Erika Mann.  That’s it for casting…for now.  Back to the outline:

Act II – The Exile and the Angel
1.     A Marriage of Convenience
Auden marries Erika Mann to help her escape Nazi Germany.  Political, absurd, and deeply moving.

2.     Flight to America
Auden and Isherwood leave England for the U.S.  The British press calls them cowards.  Auden shrugs it off, but is actually deeply wounded.

3.     New York: Reinvention
Auden meets Chester Kallman, the love of his life.  Opera, poetry, cigarettes, and late-night arguments.  Auden feels reborn.

Christ.  It’s now 03:17, and I am starting to nod off.  Finally. I save this to a file with 27 other started screenplay projects, none finished, all started in the  pre-dawn hours of some sleepless night and almost immediately abandoned when the muscle relaxers or whatever was on the menu to help me sleep when nature failed kicked in that evening.

N.P.: “Why Do I Do” – Plaine

January 25, 2026 – Burns Night

 

Hot diggity damn, dear reader…tonight is Burns Night!  Since you are not already drinking whisky and jumping off the furniture, I can only assume you are unfamiliar with Burns Night. Fair enough…it is my depressing belief that very few Americans read much anymore.  I’m not confident that many of them can read. But that’s another topic for another day.  Today is Burns Night, dammit.

Today we celebrate the birthday of the OG wordsmith of Scotland, Robert Burns!  Born January 25, 1759, this literary legend penned verses that Rolling Stone said, “flowed as smoothly as a fine Scotch whisky and as sharply as the Highland wind.”  Fact check: true.  This founding member of the D.P.S. was not only a rebel with a quill…he was the man who made haggis a legitimate subject of lyrical devotion.

Speaking of haggis, have you read his “Address to a Haggis?”  Only Burns could turn a sheep’s stomach stuffed with oats into an ode of unparalleled grandeur.  Any Burns Night celebration worth its salt (certainly any I’ve ever attended) features a massive haggis, held aloft by a group of dudes in kilts, making a lap around the entire room so all in attendance can get a close-up look at what they’re about to eat.  There are whoops and cheers (especially by those of us who’ve been drinking Snakebites for the previous few hours).  When the haggis has finished its tour around the room, it is eventually placed on a table in the center of the room, and someone then reads the “Address to a Haggis,” as significant amounts of whisky is poured over the haggis, and then it is cut with a sword and plates of the rotten stuff is passed around to whomever is daring enough to eat it.  At least that’s what how I remember it going down…I was always completely shit-housed by the time the haggis showed up.  As it should be.  As it must be.  Haggis is food for drunk people who are hungry, freezing, and out of options.  Sober people cannot eat haggis.  I mean it’s physically impossible.  The sober mind will not let its physical self willingly consume something so fetid and foul.  I have personally verified this theory many times: cold nights in San Francisco when the fridge was a little barren at home, a warm, whisky covered haggis is goddamn delicious.  Sober with a full stomach, and that same haggis is repugnant.

And let’s not forget Burns’ saucier side.  He also gifted us with “The Fornicator,” a tribute to all of us unapologetic fornicators, including himself.

And fornicate he did!  Burns fathered 12 children, nine of them out of wedlock.  He was prolific in many ways.  He worked as a farmer, a customs officer, and was allegedly the smoothest talker north of the border.  Burns was into the Enlightenment philosophers and could talk about Rousseau and Voltaire while slamming shots.

Like so many greats, Burns’ spark was snuffed out too soon.  He died on July 21, 1796, at the age of 37, likely due to rheumatic fever exacerbated by his hard-living ways.  Remarkably, the day he was laid to rest, his son Maxwell was born.

Today I recommend you crack your Burns anthology and check out “Tam o’ Shanter” or “A Red, Red Rose.”  Or, better yet, you could gut a pig, make some haggis, and recite the “Address” as you wash it down with whisky.

Slàinte, Robby!

N.P.: “Shy Boy” – JD McPherson

January 20, 2026

 

California has collapsed  and my presence here is no longer tenable.  It will obvious take time to implement my exit…such things are very much like turning aircraft carriers around…but there is a plan and the beginning steps have already been implemented.

The cause of the collapse of this once-great state lies squarely at the feet of Gavin Newsom and the Democratic supermajority that has allowed to fester in this State for far too long.

Last week, Gavin Newsom delivered his pathetic State of the State address.  I have to give him credit…at least this year he actually gave the speech.  In the past few years, he was too embarrassed to even show up to give the speech.  But there he stood, looking like the asshole he is, claiming without any actual evidence that California “leads the nation.”   And for once, he was right.  California has led the nation during his tenure in homelessness, unemployment, poverty, illiteracy, gas prices, electricity costs, debt, and outmigration.
California also, of course, leads the nation in fraud.  It’s been 5 years since the State Auditor found Newsom allowed $32 billion in unemployment fraud after ignoring “repeated warnings.”  But the Auditor just found that billions in EDD fraud continues to this day, unabated.

Minnesota’s fraud scandals have just ended Tim Walz’s miserable political career.  California should likewise end Gavin Newsom’s.  The fraud in California, one it is all dragged into the light, will far surpass anything in Minnesota.  Again, a federal audit is presently underway which will expose the full extent of it.

Finally, a proposed “wealth tax” is already causing the most predictable exodus from California.  It turns out people would rather not have the government seize their assets simply to create a bigger pot of money for fraud, waste, and corruption.  The billionaires are now fleeing the state by the dozens, and once that happens, you can bet the next lower tax bracket will be targeted.

N.P.: “Fuck This Shit I’m Out (feat. Youngblaze)” – The Theme Song

January 19, 2026

It is January 19th, dear reader, which, as I’m sure you know by this point in our relationship, means that somewhere in the vast, spiraling ether of the literary afterlife – a place I imagine looks suspiciously like a Baltimore gutter circa 1849 and smells faintly of amontillado and laudanum – Edgar Allan Poe is turning 217.  Or he would be, had he not shuffled off this mortal coil in a weird delirium tremens fugue state at the ripe old age of 40.  But we are not here to mourn the brevity of the fuse; we are here to celebrate the explosive, terrifying bang.

To be clear from the start: without Poe, modern literature is basically just a series of polite tea parties where nothing bleeds.

Before Poe, “scary” stories were mostly just moralistic claptrap about why you shouldn’t wander into the woods or stiff peers in castles rattling chains.  Poe took those chains and strangled his reader with them while whispering sweet nothings about the inevitability of premature burial.  He was the original architect of the American Nightmare who looked at the burgeoning optimism of the 19th century and said, “Yes, but what if a bird flew into your room and screamed at you about your dead girlfriend until you went insane?”

Consider the sheer, unadulterated audacity of the man.  He invented the detective story – invented it, wholesale, out of thin air – with “The Murders in the Rue Morgue.”  He gave us C. Auguste Dupin, the ur-Holmes prototype for every socially maladjusted genius sleuth from Baker Street to whatever Scandi-noir police procedural you’re currently binging on Netflix.  And he did it not because he loved the law, but because he was obsessed with the puzzle, with the friction between the rational mind and the irrational universe.

And honestly, if you haven’t tried to read “The Fall of the House of Usher” while nursing a hangover that feels like a nine-inch nail through the frontal lobe, have you even really read it?  The sensory hypersensitivity of Roderick Usher is not just a gothic trope: it is the definitive literary depiction of the Sunday Morning Fear.

We celebrate him today not because he was a saint – by all accounts, he was a disaster of a human being, a walking catastrophe of bad debts, worse decisions, and a liver that was essentially waving a white flag for two decades – but because he had the balls to stare into the abyss and take meticulous notes.  He understood that the monster isn’t under the bed: the monster is in your head, and it is probably significantly smarter than you are.

So here’s to you, Edgar, you gloomy, brilliant wretch.  I hope wherever you are, the bells are ringing, the raven has shut its beak for five minutes, and the cask is tapped.

Cheers.

N.P.: “Death Waltz” – Adam Hurst

Word of the Day: hegemony

hegemony (pronounced huh-JEM-uh-nee)
Noun
Definition: Leadership or dominance, especially by one country or social group over others. It’s the whole shebang, the top dog, the undisputed alpha at the geopolitical dog park, King Shit, The Man.  A form of leadership or dominance—usually political, cultural, or ideological—exerted by one entity over others. Not quite empire, not quite dictatorship, but the gravitational center that keeps the rest of the cosmic debris from smashing into each other at escape velocity.

The word slithers in from the ancient Greek hēgemonia, that old noun built on the verb hēgeisthai – to lead, to go first, to boss the line without quite having to shout about it.  Leadership that doesn’t need a megaphone because the weight of the thing just is, the way a big river doesn’t ask permission to carve the valley.  By the 16th century it had hopped languages and started meaning something like preponderance, dominance, the quiet (and not-so-quiet) way one player runs the board while everyone else pretends they’re still in the game.  Not raw conquest – not chains and whips every hour – but the kind of sway where the rules feel natural, the menu is already printed, and dissent starts to sound like bad manners or madness.

Look, let’s just lay the cards out on the felt, shall we?  You’ve got this sprawling, hyper-caffeinated beast called America – a nation stitched together from every conceivable scrap of humanity, running on a high-octant mix of ambition and refined sugar.  And then you have this other, smaller, altogether more ball-less and…fragrant subset of Americans whose entire waking life appears to be a meticulously curated performance of despising the very ground that keeps their Birkenstocks from sinking into the molten core of the earth. 

I am, of course, talking about the ones who spend their days hunched over glowing rectangles, fueled by fair-trade coffee and a sense of cosmic injustice, firing off screeds against the Great Satan U.S.A.  They’re the professional dissenters, the ones whose faces contort in agony if you suggest maybe, just maybe, the world needs a heavyweight in the ring to keep the whole thing from devolving into a no-holds barred cage match.  Their anti-Americanism is so reflexive, so deeply ingrained, it feels less like a political stance and more like a congenital condition.  It’s as if they believe their performative self-loathing will somehow absolve them of the sin of being born into the most powerful nation history has ever coughed up.  And it’s really embarrassing. 

These are the same folks who’d likely have decried Manifest Destiny not for its brutal realities but for its sheer lack of an ironic, self-aware hashtag.  They wring their hands and tear their hemp garments over the idea of American hegemony, apparently preferring a global free-for-all where any thug with a flag and a few thousand rifles can carve out a fiefdom built on bones and fear.  What, precisely, is the alternative they’re whiteboarding in their co-op meetings?  A world run by committee?  A planet where Russia, China, and a handful of rogue states get to hash things out over a game of Risk, with actual cities as the playing pieces?  It’s a stunningly naïve, almost childlike fantasy – the political equivalent of believing that if you just wish hard enough, the monsters under the bed will vanish.  They can’t stomach the imperfect, messy, and often brutal reality that someone has to be the biggest, baddest motherfucker in the valley.  They’d rather burn the whole valley down than admit it. 

What the hippies and fat liberal white women fail to understand is that the necessity of American hegemony isn’t some chest-thumping patriotic hymn; it’s colder arithmetic.  Without that preponderance – without the U.S. holding the sea lanes open, underwriting the global trading system, deterring the kind of multipolar pile-on that turns every border into a shooting gallery, and yes, occasionally reminding various aspiring regional powers that there are still adults in the room – the world doesn’t become some gentle multi-polar salon of equals.  It becomes the 1930s on meth: spheres of influence arm-wrestling with nukes, trade routes choked, supply chains collapsing into nationalist hoarding, proxy wars metastasizing because no one has the sheer testicular weight to say enough. 

I think the anti-Americans, those domestic dissenters who can’t stomach the idea, who gag at the mere mention that the republic they live in happens to be the one whose shadow falls the longest, are simply incapable of comprehending a realistic worldview.  So they feel compelled to spend their days in a kind of perpetual, high-decibel pantomime of resistance, “fighting” the hegemony as though it were a personal insult delivered by a smug uncle at Thanksgiving.  They march, they tweet, they riot, they convene panels titled “Decolonizing the American Gaze” or whatever, they burn energy like it’s infinite and cheap, mostly on symbolic gestures that change exactly nothing except the blood pressure of the participants.  It’s exhausting just to watch: the endless prosecutorial zeal, the certainty that every McDonald’s or Marvel movie is a cultural war crime, the silly conviction that if only the United States would shrink back into its pre-1898 borders and mind its own damn business, that the rest of humanity would spontaneously break into Kumbaya and equitable carbon credits.

It’s weird.  The confusion I feel, the real gut-churning bewilderment, is why so many of these Americans – born into the most materially abundant, personally free society to ever exist – seem hell-bent on treating their own country’s dominance as an original sin that must be ritually scourged.  They just wasted four years in this posture of anguished refusal, literally cheering on American retreat.  Meanwhile the world keeps turning, and the vacuum left by American retreat doesn’t fill with justice or equity; it fills with whoever shows up with the biggest battalions and the least scruple. 

So yes, hegemony.  Sexy word, older than sin, and necessary in the way gravity is necessary.  You can hate the pull all you want; it still keeps you from floating off into the void.  The ones who waste their lives trying to cut the cord are left clutching at air, shouting at clouds, while the rest of us keep shouldering the weight because the alternative is worse, and we know it.

N.P.: “It’s A Sin” – Ghost