The Ferryman by Justin Cronin (book review).
I think this might be SF with shades of living in a digital reality. People on the island question the social order and where people have their memories wiped.
Stories about children or young adults living in apparently idyllic situations but disappearing before they get too old arenโt new. Weโve had films such as โLoganโs Runโ and โThe Islandโ, not to mention Kazuo Ishiguroโs classic novel โNever Let Me Goโ. Justin Croninโs โThe Ferrymanโ starts off in a similar vein, with happy people living on a paradisical island somewhere in a tropical blue ocean.
As a Ferryman, the narrator, Proctor Bennett, resembles the Charon of Greek myth, conveying the old to the โNurseryโ where they are rejuvenated. While his clients do become young again, they lose their memories in the process. The twist, when it comes, is that all of this is a simulation. Thereโs no island and what seems like an ideal life is, in fact, a sort of artificial reality to pass the time on a spaceship on its way to a distant planet.
This is where Justin Cronin does something brilliant. Rather than just leaving things here, he dives straight into social commentary. Had the simulation been equally shared out among all the astronauts, that would be fair enough. But thereโs a two-tier system here, with an Annex staffed by people who are effectively slaves to the ruling class enjoying the simulation. They donโt have any say in whatโs going on, but theyโre the ones keeping the ship and the simulation going. If that doesnโt make you think of one possible end point for tech-bro neoliberalism, then nothing will.
Then thereโs the sex-free procreation that keeps the island alive. Instead of having children the old-fashioned way, children are sent back to the island as rejuvenated versions of the people who left with the ferrymen. Thereโs some definite Dark Enlightenment vibes here, the genetic quality of the offspring mattering more than parental love or the need to nurture.
While the novel does have some interesting things to say, especially in a world where billionaires really do want people to sign up for a one-way trip to Mars, it ultimately feels about 400 pages too long. Old school Science Fiction writers like Asimov and Clarke could have set up the scene and delivered the twist ending within the space of a few dozen pages.
For sure, Croninโs novel gives space for character development genre writers of the past wouldnโt have bothered with. Depends a bit on what youโre after from a novel, but if a slow-burn story with some intellectual depth sounds appealing, then โThe Ferrymanโ should be right up your street.
Neale Monks
May 2025
(pub: Orion Fiction, 2023. 546 page enlarged paperback. Price: ยฃ22.00 (UK only). ISBN: 978-1-39871-895-1)
check out website: www.orionbooks.co.uk

