Episode 84: Theme Parks
Summary: Hm, is that sound of screaming from the joy of a roller coaster or a stabbing? Today our hosts discuss books set in Theme Parks! Whether like Holly you’re more drawn to the magic and experience of places like DisneyLand or you’re like Devin chasing adrenaline on some of the fastest and most intense roller coasters on earth, there are books that can give you the thrill you’re looking for.
Topics Discussed:
The Dagger (6:53): Holly discussed FantasticLand by Mike Bockoven, a horror book reminiscent of an adult Lord of the Flies. After a hurricane ravages the Florida coast and isolates FantasticLand, a theme park where “Fun is Guaranteed!,” employees agree to stay behind to make sure the park isn’t looted and are promised to be paid to do so. Five weeks later, rescue crews arrive to find heads on spikes, bodies lined up, and employees split into warring factions. Holly’s key takeaways were:
The story fills in the gaps between the hurricane and what the rescue crews discovered through various POVs; a journalist interviews various people involved after the fact. Since the story is told through multiple interviews, readers must decide which accounts to believe, as survivors may be unreliable or have their own agendas.
The novel highlights how quickly social norms break down when survival is at stake. Cut off from the outside world, the employees turn to tribalism, reinforcing the idea that without structure, humans can revert to their most primal instincts.
The theme park itself provided a unique structure and setting for such an intense plot; the factions of employees were named after the rides near them such as the Pirates, the ShopGirls as they resort to violence while competing for food, medicine, and social dominance in what had been a whimsical space.
The Heart (19:48): Devin discussed Hot Dog Girl by Jennifer Dugan, a YA romance following Elouise (Lou) Parker and her group of friends at their summer jobs at Magic Castle Playland, a run-down local theme park in their town. Lou suffers her junior year summer wearing a giant hot dog suit around the park, while her love interest Nick gets to be a Diving Pirate dating Jessa, a princess. The news that the park will be shutting down at the end of the summer, Lou takes matters into her own hands to ensure that she has the summer of her dreams - from saving the park to fake-dating her best friend, Seeley, so she can ultimately win her man. Devin’s key takeaways were:
Magic Castle Playland is like any local, run down park that you’ve ever been to and it’s nostalgic in the way it is so typical. A large portion of the plot is dedicated to Lou’s increasingly desperate attempts to keep the park from closing and the park itself acts as a mirror and a foil for her own immaturity and growth.
The fake dating between Lou and Seeley in order to break another couple up was a challenging part of the story, especially when it’s a bi woman doing it with a lesbian to win a cis het man. There’s a stereotype of bi women (and men, but mostly women): they lead people on, they’re greedy, they can’t make up their minds, and this book fed into that stereotype.
The “young adult” aspect of this book really shone through. Nick and Seeley were mature, kind, and measured throughout but everyone else was very in their teenage years. Getting the story from Lou’s perspective was at times agonizing; a blend of being so accurate to a dumb teenager's brain and Lou’s own meddling and dramatic rhetoric.
Hot On the Shelf (36:51):
What’s Making Our Hearts Race (40:22):
Devin: Mythic Quest on AppleTV
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