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Review of 'The Rook' Season 1 Finale

Letter to Her Earlier Self

By Paul LevinsonPublished 5 years ago 2 min read
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The Rook Season 1 finale, just on last night, was an excellent, brilliant episode on all kinds of levels, including Gestalt in unified attack action again, and Myfanwy getting the better of the Russian guy who looked like Putin.

But my favorite part was next to the very end, when Myfanwy writes a letter to her earlier self. Of course that's impossible, because she can't time travel, and that's why she sends the letter to her earlier self by throwing it over the bridge into the river Thames, the place where all of this started. But there's enormous narrative significance in this. The preceding episodes this season all play off the letter and communications Mifanwy's younger self sent to her older self, the self whose mind had been wiped. The reversal of this in the end shows that Myfanwy has recovered her mind, or enough of it to be a full person, and write meaningful letters to herself again, even if they can't be delivered.

Two other notable departure points near and at the very ending. Monica asks to have her memory wiped, so she can forget about the guy who's been haunting her. The result is she might be dead. Meaning? Maybe that guy meant so much to her that she can't be alive with no memory of him. But I'm betting if there's a second season—which I sure hope there is—we'll see Monica recovered, at least in some form.

And Linda joining Myfanwy's sister's group of free EVAs is a very nice touch, too. This means that, if there is a next season, we may see Linda and Myfanwy at active odds, since Myfanwy is apparently still part of the Checquy,

Lots of things to look forward to in a season two, which as of this instant hasn't been announced. I'm going to use all of my EVA powers as a reviewer to make that happen. These powers are fairly subtle, but you never know.

They're coming out into the open, for the first time in centuries ....

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About the Creator

Paul Levinson

Novels The Silk Code & The Plot To Save Socrates; LPs Twice Upon A Rhyme & Welcome Up; nonfiction The Soft Edge & Digital McLuhan, translated into 15 languages. Best-known short story: The Chronology Protection Case; Prof, Fordham Univ.

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