• Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • RSS
June 8, Monday, 2026
  • Login
CELEBRITY LAND!
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty
  • Royalty
  • Music
  • Entertainment
  • Celebrities
  • Artists
  • Videos
No Result
View All Result
Celebrity Land
No Result
View All Result
Home Entertainment

Review of “The Hospital at the End of the World” | Entertainment/Life

Story Center by Story Center
March 16, 2026
Reading Time: 6 mins read
0
Review of "The Hospital at the End of the World" | Entertainment/Life

“The Hospital at the End of the World,” by Justin C. Key, Harper, 400 pages.

Book critics rarely, if ever, write about book covers. That task, perhaps, is the domain of designers, artists and publicists. It’s what’s between the covers that matters. But the cover might be the best place to start when reviewing Justin C. Key’s debut novel, “The Hospital at the End of the World,” an Afrofuturist medical thriller set in a dystopian New Orleans.

On the cover, drones hover menacingly over a mist-shrouded hospital complex that, in turn, rises menacingly above the tree-lined avenue of a nondescript downtown district. It’s a slick bit of photographic collage work that, with a few minutes of online sleuthing, easily reveals its source materials.

That downtown scene is taken from an aerial photo of Racine, Wisconsin, a lovely city, I hear, but an odd aesthetic choice for a New Orleans-set novel. And that mist-menaced hospital, that’s the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland — an imposing superstructure, for sure, but what’s creepier than the present-day limestone and steel tomb that is our historically beloved but now defunct Charity Hospital?

Open the pages of “The Hospital at the End of the World,” and readers will likewise find a completely unrecognizable New Orleans. Key’s novel takes place sometime in the near future, where the city remains a final, untouched frontier in a techno-capitalist world subjugated by the soul-crushing omnipresence of artificial intelligence and the cruelty of the plutocrats who make it so.

When the book’s hero, a medical student from New York named Pok Morning, arrives in the Crescent City to begin his training, he finds a place devoid of the AI tools he has taken for granted — technology not dissimilar to what exists today: AR glasses, autonomous cars, robot pets, delivery drones and omnipresent glass screens. Key’s future world has advanced some, mostly in regards to the medical field, where doctors work as little more than assistants to their AI overlords.

Much of this technology rests in the hands of Odysseus Shepherd, a one-dimensional villain drawn with the distinctive musk of a certain American oligarch, who seeks to rein in Pok, due to a long-standing beef between their fathers, while making sheep out of the techno-phobic people down in New Orleans.

The city’s resolutely analog values have ironically made it a utopia.

The local Hippocrates Medical Center, where Pok performs his medical studies, has erased racial disparities in maternal health and mortality rates. (Today, in real life Louisiana, Black women are up to four times more likely to die from pregnancy-related causes than White women.)

There’s more good news! Contrary to the actual decades-long trend, the city’s population is steadily growing. Enough to support several newspapers! (Though it’s unconfirmed whether The Times-Picayune still exists.) Confusingly, despite New Orleans’s low-tech bona fides, spires located throughout the city create an electromagnetic field that both weaken hurricanes and disable AI.

Unfortunately, New Orleans is doubly unrecognizable in these pages because Key apparently lacks any knowledge of the city he writes about. I have never read a locally set book with more cringeworthy errors. Almond and apple trees do not grow here. Hurricane season does not start in the fall, and we do not eat crawfish in the high heat of summer. There is no University Avenue streetcar, and Mid-City is not home — I can’t believe I’m writing this — to Bourbon Street.

RELATED POSTS

Michael Jackson Biopic ‘Michael’ Digital Release Date Set for June 9

Ali Louis Bourzgui gives rousing Tonys acceptance speech calling out fascists and supporting immigrants

More Than 50 Years Later, Many Eagles Fans Say This Song Hits Harder Than Ever







 Author Justin C. Key


Amina Touray


Perhaps the future has rewritten New Orleans’s climate and geography, or this is a simple case of careless research.

ADVERTISEMENT

This is too bad. The California-based Key, who is also a practicing psychiatrist, shows promise. A handful of body horror-tinged tales in his 2023 collection of speculative fiction, “The World Wasn’t Ready for You,” are good enough to make Stephen King scream. His new novel attempts to ask era-defining questions about the role of AI technology in our lives and our bodies.

But ultimately, “The Hospital at the End of the World” will leave readers, especially those who know and love the city where Key has chosen to set his story, with other questions.

Why do so many writers and artists insist on treating New Orleans as an attractive set-piece, rather than a real place, a living and breathing city? When will New Orleans stop being treated as a backward-looking outpost, a city lost in time, instead of the dynamic and progressive place that it is and has long been? And does anyone on this planet really not know that Bourbon Street is in the French Quarter?

Mirroring its cut-and-paste cover, this novel does not portray New Orleans, has nothing to say about New Orleans, and lacks any emotional insight into what makes New Orleans and its people unlike any other in the world.

At the end of this long novel, Odysseus and Pok eventually meet up for their inevitable showdown. New Orleans initially strikes Odysseus as “a curiosity,” Key writes, “an unknown.”

The villain sneers: “I expected NOLA” — yes, groan, NOLA! — “to be more original.”

Much the same can be said for this book.

Rien Fertel is the author of four books, including, most recently, “Brown Pelican.”

‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’

‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.nola.com ’

Story Center

Story Center

Related Posts

'Michael Jackson: The Verdict' Set for June 3 Release
Entertainment

Michael Jackson Biopic ‘Michael’ Digital Release Date Set for June 9

June 8, 2026
LJ Benet and Ali Louis Bourzgui in 'The Lost Boys' Broadway musicalCredit: Matthew Murphy
Entertainment

Ali Louis Bourzgui gives rousing Tonys acceptance speech calling out fascists and supporting immigrants

June 8, 2026
Eagles Don Henley Glenn Frey 2014
Entertainment

More Than 50 Years Later, Many Eagles Fans Say This Song Hits Harder Than Ever

June 8, 2026
Tony Awards 2026: "Schmigadoon!" wins best musical in a season saved by revivals
Entertainment

Tony Awards 2026: “Schmigadoon!” wins best musical in a season saved by revivals

June 8, 2026
Joe Mantello wins the Tony for his direction of "Death of a Salesman."
Entertainment

Tony Awards 2026: ‘Death of Salesman,’ the prestige hit of the Broadway season, is showered with Tony love

June 8, 2026
Tony Awards 2026: Ali Louis Bourzgui is political with 'The Lost Boys'
Entertainment

Tony Awards 2026: Ali Louis Bourzgui is political with ‘The Lost Boys’

June 8, 2026
Next Post
Wil Wheaton, River Phoenix, Corey Feldman, Jerry O'Connell

Corey Feldman Reportedly Snubbed From Oscars ‘Stand By Me’ Tribute — Why? | Entertainment

The 2026 Oscars Review: A Tasteful and Overly Safe Show Sustained by Just Enough Suspense

The 2026 Oscars Review: A Tasteful and Overly Safe Show Sustained by Just Enough Suspense

Recommended Stories

Reading Royals keep winning – beat Norfolk Admirals 2-1 - The Rink Live

Reading Royals keep winning – beat Norfolk Admirals 2-1 – The Rink Live

January 1, 2026
Gemma Collins

I’m A Celebrity shake-up as camp ‘drastically changes’ in ITV update

April 10, 2026
Royals extinguish Blazers in 4-2 win

Royals extinguish Blazers in 4-2 win

February 17, 2026
Plugin Install : Popular Post Widget need JNews - View Counter to be installed

Ads

ADVERTISEMENT

Recent News

New Music Monday - Hot songs for even hotter weather!

New Music Monday: Five Fresh Tracks Shifting Muskoka Into Summer

June 8, 2026
'Michael Jackson: The Verdict' Set for June 3 Release

Michael Jackson Biopic ‘Michael’ Digital Release Date Set for June 9

June 8, 2026
Free June 11 Birthday Bash at New Bedford Fishing Heritage Center

Free June 11 Birthday Bash at New Bedford Fishing Heritage Center

June 8, 2026

Categories

  • Artists
  • Celebrities
  • Entertainment
  • Gossip
  • Horoscopes
  • Music
  • Royalty
  • Videos

Contact Us

  • Privacy & Policy
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • DMCA Compliance
  • Terms and Conditions

© 2020 Celebrity.Land

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Royalty

© 2020 Celebrity.Land