The Unfinished Review
Editorial Preface
(from The Friendian Reader, 2154 edition)
The
essay that closes this volume has attained a curious sanctity.
Commissioned in 2078 as a mere review of a new biography of Kim
Adversary, it somehow became the last substantial document in the entire
tradition. Its author, known only as "the Reviewer" in the literature,
produced what many still regard as the clearest-eyed survey of the Jacob
Friend phenomenon — before stopping, mid-sentence, never to return to
the subject.
Subsequent
scholarship has, inevitably, produced competing interpretations of that
cutoff. The Metaphysicals read it as a moment of kenosis. The
Textualists call it a printer's error. Certain Silentist communities
maintain, with serene confidence, that the Reviewer spent the summer of
2079 living incognito among them, baiting hooks and refusing to discuss
literature after dinner. He has never confirmed nor denied the claim. In
keeping with the spirit of the piece itself, we present it here
unfinished, exactly as it first appeared.
The Unfinished Review
by Anonymous (published in The New Atlantic Review, 2078)
Any
honest account of the Jacob Friend phenomenon must begin with an
admission: it is ridiculous. A talented writer of surreal short stories
dies at thirty. He leaves behind instructions that turn his own funeral
into the world's most highbrow parlor game. Grieving friends — published
authors, members of his monthly workshop called The Rites — are asked
to bring their best unfinished manuscripts and rewrite them with the
corpse inserted as protagonist. "See what shakes out of the fiction and
falls into the real world," Jacob had always said. They took him at his
word.
One
friend arrived with a hard-boiled detective story and left with Jacob
as a brooding, chain-smoking private eye who solves murders by dreaming
them. Another produced a forty-page prose poem in which Jacob appears as
a sentient fog that subtly ruins marriages. A third turned in a
time-travel romance where the dead author keeps trying to warn his
younger self not to die so inconveniently. The mourners read these new
versions aloud in the funeral home while sipping terrible coffee. Some
laughed through tears. Others felt quietly manipulated. All of them were
already playing the game.
Then the diary surfaced.
If
the funeral instructions had the light touch of a thought experiment,
the diary was something sharper. Jacob had spent his final weeks ranking
his friends with the serene confidence of a man who would not be around
to defend his judgments. The entries have an unnerving quality —
intimate, precise, probabilistic. "I know Sal won't believe any of
this," he writes in one passage. "Jane will. I wish I could be a fly on
the wall when that particular collision happens." Reading it, one has
the sensation of watching a chess master annotate a game that hasn't
been played yet. The board is real. The players are real. Only the
master is gone.
Kim
was singled out repeatedly as the wisest, the one who "understands
best," and — crucially — the one most likely to resist the whole
enterprise. The trap was elegant. By predicting the resistance, Jacob
turned it into prophecy. Kim, reading this, must have felt the specific
helplessness of someone who sees the mechanism perfectly and cannot stop
it anyway, because seeing it is part of the mechanism.
I
confess more than a passing sympathy for Kim. I have read his four
major exegeses with something that occasionally felt uncomfortably close
to recognition — the quality of argument of a man who knows he is right
and cannot make it matter, who writes another hundred pages because
stopping would feel like surrender, who somewhere along the way stopped
trying to close the book and started needing to be the one who closed
it. His early work — Against Prophecy, The Manufactured Messiah
— has the clean fury of genuine moral clarity. His later volumes have a
different texture: rooms with closed windows. The argument is still
correct. The correctness no longer seems to be the point.
For
decades Kim fought back with the only weapons he had: biography after
biography, exegesis after exegesis, furious lectures insisting that the
books should be closed and ordinary grief allowed to proceed. Each new
volume became scripture. Each denunciation of guruship was greeted with
murmurs of "How wise… just like the old masters said." There is a
recorded exchange — preserved, with relish, in the Collected Testimonies
— in which a young disciple quotes Kim's own words back at him as proof
of his enlightenment, while Kim sits across the table visibly deciding
whether to flip it. He did not flip it. He published another book
instead. The man spent half a century trying to kill a religion and
became one of its minor saints. The Kimites still quote his outburst at
the funeral — "Do you want to be ghostwritten? Close the book. Live your real lives." — with the same reverence Catholics reserve for the Sermon on the Mount. The irony is so complete it feels almost tender.
The
factions that followed were as predictable as they were human. The
Metaphysicals wanted a prophet who could soothe the ache of existence
and found one in the fog, the detective, and the diary combined. The
Purists wanted a sophisticated secular faith built around imagination
and meaning, and policed its boundaries with impressive ferocity in
cafés that smelled of absinthe and disappointment. The Textualists just
wanted to keep writing decent stories and grew increasingly annoyed that
no one would let them.
And
then there were the Silent. They are harder to write about than the
others, and I notice I have been putting them off. They did what Kim
preached and what he could not do: they put the books down, tended
gardens, argued about sports, and grieved a flawed friend instead of a
savior. They left no record, which is why the exegetes have spent
seventy years trying to determine who they were and what they believed.
The answer is probably that they believed ordinary things, and that this
is not a satisfying answer, and that their silence knew it wouldn't be.
There is something in the quality of their absence that resists the
ironic register. I will not pretend otherwise.
One
begins to feel the gravitational pull even while describing it all.
Jacob was a manipulative genius; or Jacob was a playful innocent whose
friends over-interpreted him; or the whole thing reveals something
profound about—
[Here the manuscript ends.]
Editor's Note
(2154)
In
the decades after publication, the Reviewer politely declined hundreds
of requests to complete the essay, explain the cutoff, or offer further
commentary on the Friendian traditions. He continued writing regularly —
film criticism, cultural essays, the occasional short piece on
gardening — until his death in 2091. Neighbors described him as
sociable, mildly ironic, and fond of long walks. He was seen dating,
attending local film festivals, and fishing the northern rivers. When
asked about the famous unfinished review, he is reported to have
shrugged and said, "Nobody controls how these things land."
Certain
Silentist communities still insist he spent the summer of 2079 with
them. They describe a man who baited hooks competently, listened more
than he spoke, and once laughed out loud when someone tried to draw him
into theological discussion. Whether true or not, the story has become
part of the tradition. Like so much else in this history, it refuses to
stay merely factual.