Thursday, July 30, 2020

I Am The New God Impressions

cw: graphic imagery, murder, spoilers for I Am The New God

When I was younger, I had dreams about murder. They were both rare and unpleasant. They left me with a distinct feeling that lingered through the whole day and ruined my mood. It was a palpable, layered thing that demanded acknowledgment. Of course, that was the last thing I wanted to do so I let it fade and it always did. I certainly didn't engage with such fantasies during the day.

Nicole Cushing's I Am The New God captured that feeling perfectly. The novella took my eyes from my skull and made them watch the vilest parts of humanity. I can't say I enjoyed the experience, but it certainly caused a response. That feeling. 

Since it managed to capture it so well, I think I should do my best to describe it to you, so you understand what it was like reading this book. That feeling was scared: I was scared of myself, the unexplored landscape of the person I apparently was, a person who killed people. That feeling was liberated: few things are as taboo as the taking of life, and if society's collective weight couldn't stop me from doing that, what could it stop me from doing? That feeling was alone: I had forsaken society by breaking that rule, and so it had done the same to me. 

This is not how I imagine Greg Bryce, the novella's protagonist, felt exactly. I don't think he was ever scared of himself, and he lacked all remorse. Also, I think his loneliness was apparent before he murdered anyone, and his liberation was more directed towards his approaching godhood rather than disconnection from society. Of course, even if these elements presented themselves differently to how I would feel (thank god), they were still all there. It was lose enough to provoke a very uncomfortable familiarity.

The book has no filter when it comes to exploring this characters feelings and reactions, as off-putting as they are. I don’t think it would have worked if it held back. I understand myself better having read it, and although I’m still processing what I read, I don’t regret it.


I wonder: how similar are the feelings of murder to godhood?