Sandra Newman’s “Julia”

An authorized retelling of Orwell’s “Nineteen Eighty-Four” from the love interest’s point-of-view.

Cory Doctorow
7 min read5 days ago
The Harpercollins cover for Sandra Newman’s ‘Julia.’

If you’d like an essay-formatted version of this poThe first chapter of Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four has a fantastic joke that nearly everyone misses: when Julia, Winston Smith’s love interest, is introduced, she has oily hands and a giant wrench, which she uses in her “mechanical job on one of the novel-writing machines”:

https://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks01/0100021.txt

That line just kills me every time I re-read the book — Orwell, a novelist, writing a dystopian future in which novels are written by giant, clanking mechanisms. Later on, when Winston and Julia begin their illicit affair, we get more detail:

She could describe the whole process of composing a novel, from the general directive issued by the Planning Committee down to the final touching-up by the Rewrite Squad. But she was not interested in the finished product. She ‘didn’t much care for reading,’ she said. Books were just a commodity that had to be produced, like jam or bootlaces.

I always assumed Orwell was subtweeting his publishers and editors here, and you can only imagine that the editor who asked Orwell to tweak the 1984 manuscript must have felt an uncomfortable parallel between their requests and the notional Planning Committee and Rewrite Squad at the Ministry of Truth.

I first read 1984 in the early winter of, well, 1984, when I was thirteen years old. I was on a family trip that included as visit to my relatives in Leningrad, and the novel made a significant impact on me. I immediately connected it to the canon of dystopian science fiction that I was already avidly consuming, and to the geopolitics of a world that seemed on the brink of nuclear devastation. I also connected it to my own hopes for the nascent field of personal computing, which I’d gotten an early start on, when my father — then a computer science student — started bringing home dumb terminals and acoustic couplers from his university in the mid-1970s. Orwell crystallized my nascent horror at the oppressive uses of technology (such as the automated Mutually Assured Destruction nuclear systems that haunted my nightmares) and my dreams of the better worlds we could have with computers.

It’s not an overstatement to say that the rest of my life has been about this tension. It’s no coincidence that I wrote a series of “Little Brother” novels whose protagonist calls himself w1n5t0n:

https://craphound.com/littlebrother/Cory_Doctorow_-_Little_Brother.htm

I didn’t stop with Orwell, of course. I wrote a whole series of widely read, award-winning stories with the same titles as famous sf tales, starting with “Anda’s Game” (“Ender’s Game”):

https://www.salon.com/2004/11/15/andas_game/

And “I, Robot”:

https://craphound.com/overclocked/Cory_Doctorow_-_Overclocked_-_I_Robot.html

“The Martian Chronicles”:

https://escapepod.org/2019/10/03/escape-pod-700-martian-chronicles-part-1/

“True Names”:

https://archive.org/details/TrueNames

“The Man Who Sold the Moon”:

https://memex.craphound.com/2015/05/22/the-man-who-sold-the-moon/

and “The Brave Little Toaster”:

https://archive.org/details/Cory_Doctorow_Podcast_212

Writing stories about other stories that you hate or love or just can’t get out of your head is a very old and important literary tradition. As EL Doctorow (no relation) writes in his essay “Genesis,” the Hebrews stole their Genesis story from the Babylonians, rewriting it to their specifications:

https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/41520/creationists-by-e-l-doctorow/

As my “famous title” stories and Little Brother books show, this work needn’t be confined to antiquity. Modern copyright may be draconian, but it contains exceptions (“fair use” in the US, “fair dealing” in many other places) that allow for this kind of creative reworking. One of the most important fair use cases concerns The Wind Done Gone, Alice Randall’s 2001 retelling of Margaret Mitchell’s Gone With the Wind from the perspective of the enslaved characters, which was judged to be fair use after Mitchell’s heirs tried to censor the book:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suntrust_Bank_v._Houghton_Mifflin_Co.

In ruling for Randall, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals emphasized that she had “fully employed those conscripted elements from Gone With the Wind to make war against it.” Randall used several of Mitchell’s most famous lines, “but vest[ed] them with a completely new significance”:

https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/appellate-courts/F3/268/1257/608446/

The Wind Done Gone is an excellent book, and both its text and its legal controversy kept springing to mind as I read Sandra Newman’s wonderful novel Julia, which retells 1984 from the perspective of Julia, she of the oily hands the novel-writing machine:

https://www.harpercollins.com/products/julia-sandra-newman?variant=41467936636962

Julia is the kind of fanfic that I love, in the tradition of both Wind Done gone and Rosenkrantz and Gildenstern Are Dead, in which a follow-on author takes on the original author’s throwaway world-building with deadly seriousness, elucidating the weird implications and buried subtexts of all the stuff and people moving around in the wings and background of the original.

For Newman, the starting point here is Julia, an enigmatic lover who comes to Winston with all kinds of rebellious secrets — tradecraft for planning and executing dirty little assignations and acquiring black market goods. Julia embodies a common contradiction in the depiction of young women (she is some twenty years younger than Winston): on the one hand, she is a “native” of the world, while Winston is a late arrival, carrying around all his “oldthink” baggage that leaves him perennially baffled, terrified and angry; on the other hand, she’s a naive “girl,” who “doesn’t much care for reading,” and lacks the intellectual curiosity that propels Winston through the text.

This contradiction is the cleavage line that Newman drives her chisel into, fracturing Orwell’s world in useful, fascinating, engrossing ways. For Winston, the world of 1984 is totalitarian: the Party knows all, controls all and misses nothing. To merely think a disloyal thought is to be doomed, because the omnipotent, omniscient, and omnicompetent Party will sense the thought and mark you for torture and “vaporization.”

Orwell’s readers experience all of 1984 through Winston’s eyes and are encouraged to trust his assessment of his situation. But Newman brings in a second point of view, that of Julia, who is indeed far more worldly than Winston. But that’s not because she’s younger than him — it’s because she’s more provincial. Julia, we learn, grew up outside of the Home Counties, where the revolution was incomplete and where dissidents — like her parents — were sent into exile. Julia has experienced the periphery of the Party’s power, the places where it is frayed and incomplete. For Julia, the Party may be ruthless and powerful, but it’s hardly omnicompetent. Indeed, it’s rather fumbling.

Which makes sense. After all, if we take Winston at his word and assume that every disloyal citizen of Oceania is arrested, tortured and murdered, where would that leave Oceania? Even Kim Jong Un can’t murder everyone who hates him, or he’d get awfully lonely, and then awfully hungry.

Through Julia’s eyes, we experience Oceania as a paranoid autocracy, corrupt and twitchy. We witness the obvious corollary of a culture of denunciation and arrest: the ruling Party of such an institution must be riddled with internecine struggle and backstabbing, to the point of paralyzed dysfunction. The Orwellian trick of switching from being at war with Eastasia to Eurasia and back again is actually driven by real military setbacks — not just faked battles designed to stir up patriotic fervor. The Party doesn’t merely claim to be under assault from internal and external enemies — it actually is.

Julia is also perfectly positioned to uncover the vast blank spots in Winston’s supposed intellectual curiosity, all the questions he doesn’t ask — about her, about the Party, and about the world. I love this trope and used it myself, in Attack Surface, the third “Little Brother” book, which is told from the point of view of Marcus’s frenemy Masha:

https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250757531/attacksurface

Through Julia, we come to understand the seemingly omniscient, omnipotent Party as fumbling sadists. The Thought Police are like MI5, an Island of Misfit Toys where the paranoid, the stupid, the vicious and the thuggish come together to ruin the lives of thousands, in such a chaotic and pointless manner that their victims find themselves spinning devastatingly clever explanations for their behavior:

https://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/adamcurtis/entries/3662a707-0af9-3149-963f-47bea720b460

And, as with Nineteen Eighty-Four, Julia is a first-rate novel, expertly plotted, with fantastic, nail-biting suspense and many smart turns and clever phrases. Newman is doing Orwell, and, at times, outdoing him. In her hands, Orwell — like Winston — is revealed as a kind of overly credulous romantic who can’t believe that anyone as obviously stupid and deranged as the state’s representatives could be kicking his ass so very thoroughly.

This was, in many ways, the defining trauma and problem of Orwell’s life, from his origin story, in which he is shot through the throat by a fascist: sniper during the Spanish Civil War:

https://www.rjgeib.com/thoughts/soldiers/george-orwell-shot.html

To his final days, when he developed a foolish crush on a British state spy and tried to impress her by turning his erstwhile comrades in to her:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orwell%27s_list

Newman’s feminist retelling of Orwell is as much about puncturing the myth of male competence as it is about revealing the inner life, agency, and personhood of swooning love-interests. As someone who loves Orwell — but not unconditionally — I was moved, impressed, and delighted by Julia.

Tor Books just published two new, free “Little Brother” stories: “Vigilant,” a about creepy surveillance in distance education; and “Spill,” about oil pipelines and indigenous landback.

If you’d like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, here’s a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:

https://pluralistic.net/2024/09/28/novel-writing-machines/#fanfic

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