Sci-fi author: I created the Joy Nexus to show how a better society is within reach - sure, it’s not perfect, but it’s a start. Readers: The Joy Nexus is a chilling dystopian warning. We must never let it happen
— Jo Lindsay Walton (@jolwalton.bsky.social) 3 January 2025 at 10:14
Adam Roberts’ Lake of Darkness (2024) offers a highly automated, post-work, post-scarcity ambiguous utopia.
These kinds of utopias are probably by now familiar to many SF readers, so Roberts has latitude to bring his own distinctive twists and emphases.
Social organisation is based on ‘fandoms.’ The society is mostly post-literate (or at least post-typography, accustomed to interacting with texts by speaking and listening to AIs). There is a lot of attention given to variety and mobility:
These two things – a vast, almost endless proliferation of different societies, different human-climates, different modes of living – and the rapid and easy ability to pass on to any of them – constitute the key to our contemporary utopia. [...] For some, just knowing that they can leave is enough to ensure their happiness wherever they are. But though human utopia reaches across thousands of worlds and habitats, it cannot reach everywhere – or to be precise, its core quality, the guarantor of viability, the open exit door, cannot be accessed everywhere.
Then Satan, imprisoned in a black hole, recapitulates the argument that toil is necessary for humans to live meaningful lives.
Your utopia. It’s all a bit trivial, don’t you think? You’re all just playing games, as children do. None of you are really doing anything, really achieving anything. Where is your Homer? Your Shakespeare, your Beethoven, your Chi Lin, your Yin Lui? You’re paddling around your paddling pool with the puffed-up armbands still on your pudgy little arms. Don’t you think it’s time to put all that behind you? Let me out, and the baby-comforts of your collective existence would be demolished. There would be suffering, I don’t deny it. But without that friction nothing truly great, nothing truly enduring is possible. Something something cuckoo-clocks, something something Borgias, Leonardo and the Renaissance.
There is a hiss on the word “Renaissance”: Roberts really does seem to bend over backwards to remind us that this argument, MADE BY THE DEVIL, may be a dodgy one.
Something something cucko-clocks, something something Borgias, Leonardo and the Renaissance. This is a reference to The Third Man, and the (inaccurate but great) zinger that five hundred years of Swiss democracy and peace produced nothing but the cuckoo clock. The devil's half-assedness here is the point: the argument is so familiar, it barely needs to be said, is always on the tip (or tips) of your tongue.
So I don't think we're really meant to come away from Lake of Darkness reinvigorated and pumped for more scarcity and more work ethic. However, the Joy Nexus effect -- whereby contemporary readers are predisposed to read all utopias as dystopian -- is as strong as ever.
"Not all Utopias are Utopian," comments one Amazon reviewer. Another ponders "whether the pursuit of happiness without realy investment in working for it has any external value." (Makes you think is a thought-terminating cliche). On Goodreads, one reviewer describes the book as "critiquing utopianism," while another comments: "Also typical are the sort of general conclusions of the author that we see in other novels, namely that utopia infantilizes humanity and people need toil and suffering to live meaningful lives."
Maybe we're already post-literate? Or is it just me? Or is it possible that Roberts, like Milton, is a true poet and of the devil's party without knowing it?
I really liked Lake of Darkness in the end, one of my favourites by him of those I've read. A little infuriating.