• Stories That Matter
    Apr 24 2026
    Today’s Story that Matters is “Bloodchild” by Octavia Butler. This short story originally appeared in Asimov’s Sci Fi Mag in 1984 but its main message is probably even more relevant today than it was then.In the version I read, Butler provided an afterward, telling us two things she was going for. The first is that this is her “pregnant man story.” I’m not going to say anything about that except to say that yes, it’s horrifying, especially for us dudes out there, and it’s also interesting from a gender perspective. But her second point is the “crucial survival information” I’m after in this series. The story is about “paying the rent.” She means this more biologically than economically, in the sense that every living thing has to earn its right to survive, something folks in extremely wealthy societies have a tendency to forget.The story is about a society of humans who somehow end up on another planet, where they are not the dominant species. The Tlic, giant centipede like creatures, intelligent and technologically advanced, rule the place, but somehow humans have survived. The story starts on a domestic scene, familiar until the 10 foot tall talking bug shows up. One question comes up quickly: why do these powerful creatures tolerate, even put energy into taking care of these late coming humans? The answer is, as in all nature, the humans are useful to the Tlic, and over the generations, the two species have settled into an uneasy symbiosis, where the humans provide a service in exchange for relatively comfortable lives. No problem, right? Until you learn what the service is, and I’ll let you discover that yourselves.We learn that the relationship was not always so polite, and that generations before, humans were simply herded up like livestock and forced to do as the Tlic pleased. The humans were weak, but that’s not the same as powerless. It turns out that an intelligent animal can find all kinds of ways to gum up the system, and so it made sense for both parties to come to a consensus rather than one using brute force on the other. I’ll close this summary by saying that the compromise feels uncomfortably like marriage, especially marriage before the various waves of modern feminism. You’ve got a physically larger and materially and instructionally powerful individual taking on a smaller, weaker partner. He gets a companion, a sexual outlet, and offspring; she gets protection, a house, and if she’s “married well,” status and luxury. Hopefully she also likes the guy. In any event, this is totally transactional, sweetened up by a veneer of romance.So why is this idea of paying the rent so important today? For most of human history, nobody had be reminded that they had to work for a living. Starvation, exposure to the element, and violent death were always at the doorstep. But in the wealthiest human society in history, we tend to take everything we’ve got for granted. Our ancestors paid the rent for us, so we forget that this is a recurring payment. Instead of being grateful for the house we live in, we complain bitterly about our two-car garage when the neighbor has a three-car garage. Everything feels unfair. Aren’t we owed more? Why isn’t the government, or some other higher power, solving our problems for us? We assume that we’ll always have the basics of food, shelter, and clothing, so we aim for status. We assume we’ll always live in a democracy—at least we used to assume that. Not long ago, we assumed no American president would ever refuse to concede his electoral loss, that no sitting president would ever encourage a violent mob to attack the seat of power in order to disrupt the certifying of votes. What happened in Germany, the USSR, Italy…that could never happen here. The worst thing in the world is that my life doesn’t compare favorably to the lives I see on Instagram. Where’s my yacht, my jet, my second, third, and fourth homes? At the very least, where’s my brand-new deluxe edition Ford F-250 with dual back wheels?Only wealthy humans have fooled themselves into believing they are exempt from the rules that govern the rest of nature. When we fool ourselves into believing we are owed something, that everything we have is a kind of inevitable birthright, that we were put on this planet to have our desires granted, we’re in for a lifetime of disappointment. Some call this assumption entitlement, and it’s a recipe for unhappiness at the least. It’s also a good way to lose everything you’ve taken for granted, including our lives.In this story that takes place on a fictional planet far away, Butler is reminding us of that most earthly fact: nobody owes us anything, and the price of life is struggle. The humblest flowering weed puts a ton of energy into the bright colors of its flower and into its nectar, because baby, nobody’s going to spread your pollen unless they get some sweet nectar in return. Nature is brutally ...
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    12 mins
  • Empathy for the Devil
    Apr 22 2026

    Jones is into skiing and also into fatherhood. Daniels is a longtime fan of MFA student fave "Toby" Wolff. These interests overlap in a couple of realist stories about bad guys you reluctantly grow to like. A good time was had by all.

    The stories are short and fun to read. Here they are: https://rwwsoundings.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/Three-Stories-by-Tobias-Wolff.pdf



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keldaniels.substack.com
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    59 mins
  • Stories that Matter
    Apr 15 2026

    The plot of Lord of Light would have seemed a lot more outlandish when it was published in 1967, but these days it feels all to plausible, if not creepily familiar. The novel drops us right into a strange situation. On a planet that might not be Earth, a bunch of powerful entities are up to all kinds of mysterious business. They are all named after Hindu gods, like Krishna, Ganesh, Shiva, and so on. At first I thought they were actual gods, but eventually their powers seemed more technological than supernatural, and slowly the context takes shape, and this is the crucial survival information. These so called gods are all former tech lords, basically, people hundreds or even thousands of years before who got access to godlike technology, but instead of sharing it with the world, they hoarded it for themselves. One of the technologies was the ability to upload one’s mind into a new body as the old one ages, so these folks are immortal, unless they are suddenly killed. You can imagine why they didn’t want to share the tech with the rest of the world. If nobody dies, we’d run out of space pretty quickly, so instead, they reduce the rest of humankind to a permanent dark ages, where the ignorant worship the tech lords/gods. There’s an elaborate system of priesthood, where a dedicated loyalists can sometimes rise to the rank of god, only when a present god dies. Of course, the current gods are ultra paranoid about being killed, so that doesn’t happen often. Whenever a human civilization starts to rise up and invent things, like technology or enlightenment thinking, the tech gods use their priests to send in a hoard of barbarians to kill the upstarts and destroy their inventions and writing. This has been going on for ages and ages.

    The conflict of the story is that one of the gods decides, partly out of boredom, to buck the system and let the poor plebs advance. This sets off a great war among the gods, and that’s where the story takes place. I find it a little chilling that the only hope for regular humans at this point is if one of the tech lords decides to help them. No way the hero is coming from the plebs’ own ranks. Poor folk in this novel have zero agency.

    So what can this possibly have to do with our world today? Surely our tech lords, Musk and company, most of whom have warned that AI poses existential risk to the human species, though that risk hasn’t stopped one of them from dropping out of the accelerated development of this stuff, surely they’ll be nice to us, once they rule the world, right? I mean, sure, they all have bunkers in New Zealand, and small armies of former Navy Seals to protect themselves, but they wouldn’t subjugate us, would they? I mean, they seem so nice on social media. Nothing to worry about, right?



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keldaniels.substack.com
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    9 mins
  • "Bloodchild" by Octavia Butler
    Apr 8 2026

    Fresh off the ten episode streaming series, the fellows were ready for some written text. Daniels brought in a classic sci fi story about a cadre of humans who generations before found themselves on a planet already dominated by a superior alpha species. To survive, the humans had to make some disquieting compromises. Content warning: majorium creepatorium.

    https://www.are.na/block/23328715

    https://sffremembrance.com/2025/10/21/short-story-review-bloodchild-by-octavia-e-butler/



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keldaniels.substack.com
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    1 hr and 3 mins
  • Stories that Matter
    Apr 7 2026

    This is the first video in a series of story recommendations that contain crucial survival information, the sorts of stories that are passed down generation after generation, not because they are merely entertaining, but because they tell us how to live, and how not to live.



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keldaniels.substack.com
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    5 mins
  • Station Eleven, Episode Ten
    Mar 25 2026

    Station Eleven wraps it all up in most satisfying fashion, leaving the guys to wonder, what's next?



    This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keldaniels.substack.com
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    1 hr and 10 mins