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THE MEMORY LIBRARIAN by Janelle  Monáe

THE MEMORY LIBRARIAN

And Other Stories of Dirty Computer

by Janelle Monáe

Pub Date: April 19th, 2022
ISBN: 978-0-06-307087-5
Publisher: Harper Voyager

In her debut collection, musician and actress Monáe collaborates with a different writer for every story to explore a world defined by some people's resistance to a dangerous surveillance state in which memories are currency.

An introduction, "Breaking Dawn," lays out the collection's guiding thought experiment: In a world with cameras everywhere, most people have accepted the idea that "an eye in the sky might protect us from...ourselves, our world"—and soon, not content with seeing the surface of things, the New Dawn found ways "past the encrypted walls of our minds," into people's thoughts and memories. This constant surveillance divides the nation into those who are safe and clean and those who are "deviant, complex"—the dirty computers. The title story, written with Alaya Dawn Johnson, explores the life of Seshet, the Director Librarian of Little Delta, the New Dawn's highest-ranking position. Interested in the contradictions of bureaucracy and the conflict within someone with the power to enforce rules who doesn't abide by them, Seshet investigates the curious background of her new lover. “Nevermind” is both a memory-enhancing drug and a story (written with Danny Lore) set in an off-grid community where women and nonbinary people can exist free from “people trying to force so much on [them]. Capitalism for one; monogamy for another.” The theme of collective resistance continues in some of the other stories. In "Timebox," written with Eve L. Ewing, a couple discovers extra time hidden in their pantry, pushing them to grapple with inequities in the way time is distributed. The last story, “Timebox Alta(red),” written with Sheree Renée Thomas, has a group of children create an altar that transports them through time and space, showing that you can’t build the future if you don’t dream it first. Studded with references to Monáe's album Dirty Computer (2018), the book is a clever adaptation of music to a new form. Emotionally raw and with a wholehearted love for people, these stories will make readers long to forge deeper human connections by sharing and holding one another's memories.

A celebration of queer and Afrofuturist science fiction saluting creativity in difference.