Free Pass, Julian Hanshaw's 2022 graphic novel, isn't winking. Hanshaw avoids drawing the nitty-gritty of sex most of the time, or obscures it, but this is a book about one couple and their sex life - and they're young and reasonably energetic. And...but then, I'll get into the plot in a moment.
The book opens with the couple - Huck and Nadia, young British tech workers who are maybe thirty, maybe a few years one side or the other of that - talking sex, while we see their house from outside, porno movies playing on a big screen we can see through a sliding door. They're discussing having sex with other people, we come to realize, possibly partner swapping. They haven't done it yet, but they're both intrigued, and running through the other couples they know, the times they wonder if it might have happened, and what comes next.
Eventually, they decide to make "Free Pass" lists - five celebrities for each of them, people they could have sex with guilt- and consequence-free if it somehow happened. We see Huck making his list over the next few days - the book mostly follows him, mostly lets us understand what's in his head - in his job at a tech company, Abrazo.
They both work at Abrazo, which is mostly a fictionalized Facebook: big, all-encompassing, dominant. Nadia is a programmer; we don't see a lot of what she does, but she's more technical, more specifically skilled, than Huck is. Huck is on a moderation team, maybe a low-level supervisor there. We don't see the things he moderates, just the complaints about them, and something of the internal Abrazo double-speak about what they get rid of and what they don't.
Frankly, I think Hanshaw has a specific political point here, and it's a bit opaque to me. In the US, especially now, three years later, what we saw the big tech companies trying to do with moderation was largely getting rid of the worst of the worst: hate speech, death threats, attacks on people with racial and sexually-charged language. The complaint with that approach was that they tended to censor right-wing voices - the unspoken underpinning was that the right wing was deeply hateful, sexist and racist, but that they saw that as a good thing and wanted free rein to spew their anger and vitriol everywhere, to yell as loudly as they could and take over any spaces they could drive other people out of. I'm pretty sure Hanshaw isn't saying he's in favor of that, but, from a US perspective in 2025, I'm not sure what else he means. Maybe it's some more lefty flavor of Abrazo being too chummy with the government, and getting rid of anything against their interests.
Because, you see, there's an election coming up. The candidates are fictional, and we don't know what parties they represent. But there's a "four more years" person (Libby) and a "change it all" person (Maynard) - which I think codes them as Tory and Labour, respectively. The book is organized by the days until the election: we start a little more than two weeks out. But, like Abrazo's moderation decisions, any actual political policies are presented in coded, nonspecific terms - so I think what it means is clearer if you're British, particularly if you are British and it is 2022, looking towards the general election that eventually happened in 2024.
The election itself is mostly background, but Abrazo's moderation decisions are a huge part of Huck's day, and a source of stress to him. He's listening to podcasts from "the other side" - I think Hanshaw means people like the EFF, free-internet types, rather than Nigel Farage and the kick-out-the-foreigners crowd - which some of his co-workers look askance at. He's also a bit awkward, in that tech-guy way, and for a while I wondered if he was meant to be seen as incel-adjacent, as having picked up some of those thoughts and ideas despite being in an on-going successful relationship.
That's all swirling around, when Huck gets a new product to test - from Ali, the male half of the couple he and Nadia hit upon as the perfect choices for their first swinging experience in the first scene. It's an AI sex robot, Ali says. It comes in a big box; it's a blank humanoid form that has a tablet to control it. On that tablet is a menu of people, men and women, and the user can choose who the robot turns into. And, of course, the robot is a wonderful, perfect, lover, in that time-honored way that traces back to at least Tanith Lee's Silver Metal Lover (or maybe Barbarella, or even, if you accept much more winking and hinting, "Helen O'Loy").
Many stories with a sex robot like that would be about jealousy, about a break-up, but Huck and Nadia are enthusiastic and experimental and geeky, and they take to their new fuck-buddy like fish to water. Hanshaw presents this imagistically, but I think it's mostly "turn it into a man for you, and then into a woman for me," with maybe some three-way fun along the way. But they have a lot of sex - even more so once Nadia realizes she can mildly hack the tablet and turn the robot into anyone, not just the hardcoded choices. They spend something like a week just fucking celebrity simulacra, and seem to be fantastically happy at it, if maybe a bit sore and tired by the end.
But, meanwhile, Nadia has been interviewing with a newer tech company, Hapus, which promises to be more responsive and independent. They specifically do not moderate in the way that's problematic with Abrazo, whatever that's meant to be. She gets the job, and Huck is supportive, but maybe not entirely happy - because she might be moving away from him or because he feels guilty about what he does for Abrazo, or both.
Huck and Nadia actually call out sick from work for several days for their fuck-fest, which is yet another element that leads to a confrontation between Ali and Huck. They give back the sex robot, and the election happens.
I think we're meant to guess who won; Hanshaw doesn't say. The last section jumps ahead a year: Nadia is happily working for Hapus, Huck is running for a local political office, and the sex robots are rolling out broadly. I think it's meant to be a happy ending, but I don't know what party Huck is standing for or what his platform is, and ubiquitous easily-hackable sex robots might not be the most stabilizing element to add into a society. So maybe ambiguously happy.
Hanshaw has a fairly lumpy way of drawing people, which is surprisingly excellent for this story: his people are real and flawed, not porn models. Huck and Nadia look like relatively fit, fairly young, absolutely normal people, and even the sex robot doesn't come across as pure pneumatic distilled sex, just another body with which they can have fun.
And Free Pass is absolutely packed with ideas and thoughts - about sex, relationships, online discourse, how to think about governments - mostly posed in non-specific, non-partisan ways, so it doesn't trip anyone's propaganda detectors. It's a fun, quirky, mostly positive book about a couple who have a lot of sex with a sex robot and come out of it (and associated events) with a stronger relationship.
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