Foe (Reid novel)
Foe is the second novel by Canadian writer Iain Reid. It was released in August 2018 in the United States by Simon & Schuster. The book has been described as a psychological thriller and horror fiction against a science fiction backdrop. Reid referred to it as a "philosophical suspense story". Foe is set in the near future and is about a married couple living on a remote farm whose lives are thrown in turmoil when a stranger arrives.
Foe was placed on the Horror Writers Association's 2018 Bram Stoker Awards Preliminary Ballot for "Superior Achievement in a Novel". Reid sold the film rights for Foe to entertainment company Anonymous Content four months before the book was published. He has been earmarked as the film's executive producer.
Plot summary
Foe is set in the near future, and is narrated by Junior, who lives with his wife Henrietta on a remote farm. In the novel, all dialogue is punctuated with quote marks, except for Junior's, which has none. One night a stranger appears at their door who introduces himself has Terrance from an aerospace corporation called OuterMore. Terrance announces that Junior has been selected to travel to the Installation, a large space station in orbit around Earth. He will remain there for about two years, before returning home. Junior is deeply in love with Hen and is not happy leaving her alone. Terrance reassures him that while he is gone, he will be replaced by a biomechanical duplicate that will care for Hen. Junior is horrified. Terrance visits the farm house regularly to interview him and collect data to help configure his replacement.Relations between Junior and Hen become strained. He resents Terrance's presence and she will not talk about it. After about two years, Terrance moves in with them so he can monitor Junior's daily routine. Terrance also spends time interviewing Hen, which angers Junior. He manages to eavesdrop on some of their conversations, and it seems that she knows more about what is going on than she is telling him. Once Terrance asks her if she would like to get away, and she relates to him a fantasy she has of walking out on her husband. After seeing Terrance spend so much time with Hen, Junior becomes convinced that it is Terrance who will be replacing him when he has gone.
One day Terrance congratulates Junior, saying that he did very well. Junior is confused, then astounded when another man looking exactly like him walks in through the door. Terrance introduces the stranger as the real Junior who has just returned from the Installation. He explains to a stunned Junior that he is the replacement sent two years ago to live with the real Junior's wife. Junior refuses to believe this and pleads with Hen for help, but she remains quiet. As he becomes filled with rage, Terrance says, "It's time for this to end," and shuts him down.
The real Junior becomes the narrator, with quote-marked speech, and is pleased to be back home again with his wife. When he asks Hen what it was like living with "it", she says it was difficult at first. His behaviour was predictable, but he adapted quickly and she was surprised how much he genuinely cared for her. She says she regrets him having being shutdown. This angers Junior, who can't understand how she could have felt anything for her "fake digital husband". Their relationship deteriorates, until one day she walks out. That night she returns, but has changed – she is affectionate and cares for him. Junior is pleased to have his wife back as he remembered her. In the text, Hen's dialogue now has no quote marks. A few days later, Terrance visits briefly to check on them. Hen is pleased to see him and says that everything is fine. Junior agrees, adding, "things are finally getting back to normal".
Background
Reid said in an interview that the theme of isolation in Foe and his first novel, I'm Thinking of Ending Things comes from growing up on a farm in remote Ontario. While he appreciates solitude, he said he recognises the importance of relationships, and the tension between seclusion and companionship fascinates him.Reid said his desire to write about space came from his brother, who works in the space industry. He discussed this topic often with his brother, but when Reid gave him early drafts of Foe to read, his response was, "It's not really about space." Reid ended up cutting so much that the outer-space parts became "more of a metaphor than anything else".
Reception
In a review in the Los Angeles Review of Books, Gabino Iglesias described Foe as "an engrossing, strange, addictive read." He said the blend of "literary fiction, science fiction, psychological thriller, and horror" produces an unsettling read in which every event is viewed with suspicion. While most of the story takes place in Junior and Henrietta's farmhouse, Reid's exploration of their relationship makes it "a universe full of questions and possibilities." Iglesias called Reid "one of the most talented purveyors of weird, dark narratives in contemporary fiction."Writing in The Columbus Dispatch, Margaret Quamme called the novel "stark" and "unsettling". She said its power is in what the story leaves out, rather than what it presents. Telling it from Junior's restricted point of view gives the reader a limited picture of what is happening. She remarked that Foe is science fiction in the same way that The Twilight Zone is science fiction – it explores human behaviour rather than creates "a credible, scientifically based world of the future." Quamme described Foe as " subtly disturbing horror novel lets the questions it raises hover, unresolved, in the reader's mind."
Zachary Houle found Foe to be "genuinely creepy and paranoid". Reviewing the book on the online publishing website Medium, Houle said it is science fiction, "but not very" – Reid provides no details of the biotechnology used in the story. He suggested calling the book "new weird", a literary genre American author Jeff VanderMeer popularized, and added that Foe could be compared to VanderMeer's novel Borne. He also compared the paranoia in Foe to "one of the most paranoid texts", John Carpenter's 1982 film The Thing. Houle wrote that while he had reservations about the book's "multiple endings", the reader is rewarded with a "double-twist". He concluded that it is "a superlative tale", and called it "one of the very best Canadian books I have read in a long, long, long time."