Elaine Castillo’s latest novel, “Moderation,” arrives as a bold examination of what it means to find authentic connection in an increasingly virtual world. Following her acclaimed debut America Is Not the Heart and the incisive essay collection How to Read Now, Castillo delivers a work that seamlessly weaves together romance, social criticism, and speculative fiction into a narrative that feels both urgently contemporary and timelessly human.
The story centers on Girlie Delmundo, proclaimed as “the greatest content moderator in the world,” whose expertise in cleaning the digital refuse of social media platforms earns her a coveted promotion to Playground, a revolutionary virtual reality company. When Playground’s parent corporation Reeden acquires this VR entertainment juggernaut, Girlie finds herself thrust into elite-level content moderation—policing not just posts and images, but entire immersive historical worlds where users can live out medieval fantasies or walk through recreated ancient Rome.
The Architecture of Digital Labor
Elaine Castillo’s genius lies in her unflinching portrayal of content moderation as both invisible and essential labor. Through Girlie’s eyes, we witness the psychological toll of constantly consuming humanity’s worst impulses—the sexual harassment, racial slurs, and creative cruelties that proliferate in virtual spaces. The author draws clear parallels between this modern form of digital cleaning and the historical roles Filipino Americans have occupied in service industries, creating a throughline that connects colonial history to contemporary tech exploitation.
The novel’s exploration of virtual reality transcends mere technological fascination. Castillo understands that VR represents not just entertainment, but a potential restructuring of human experience itself. When Girlie enters Playground’s medieval world, complete with jousting tournaments and elaborate historical reenactments, the technology becomes both escape and trap—offering transcendent beauty while demanding constant vigilance against those who would corrupt it.
Love in the Time of Algorithms
At its heart, “Moderation” by Elaine Castillo is a love story between Girlie and William Cheung, Playground’s enigmatic Chief Product Officer and co-founder. Their romance unfolds with the careful precision of Castillo’s prose, building from professional encounters to deeper emotional territory. William emerges as a complex figure—part tech visionary, part reluctant corporate player, carrying the weight of his departed business partner Edison’s idealistic dreams for what VR could become.
The relationship between Girlie and William serves as the novel’s emotional anchor, but Castillo refuses to let their attraction exist in a vacuum. Their connection develops against the backdrop of corporate machinations, family obligations, and the constant question of whether genuine intimacy is possible when your livelihood depends on moderating human connection itself.
Family Dynamics and Cultural Specificity
Castillo’s treatment of Filipino American family dynamics remains one of her greatest strengths. Girlie’s relationship with her younger cousin Maribel captures the particular intensity of kinship ties, where love and obligation intertwine in sometimes suffocating ways. The family’s migration from the Bay Area to Las Vegas speaks to broader patterns of displacement and economic necessity that define many immigrant experiences.
The novel’s Las Vegas setting proves particularly apt—a city built on illusion, where the line between authentic and artificial constantly blurs. Girlie’s family inhabits a gated community that represents both achievement and isolation, their success measured in mortgage payments and luxury car loans while emotional distances remain vast as the Nevada desert.
The Weight of History
Through Playground’s historical VR environments, Castillo interrogates how the past gets commodified and sanitized for contemporary consumption. The collaboration with L’Olifant, a French theme park company, raises questions about whose history gets told and how cultural heritage becomes content to be consumed. The novel suggests that even virtual experiences of the past carry real consequences for how we understand ourselves and our world.
The character of Dr. Perera, who develops VR therapy protocols, adds another layer to this exploration. His work with combat veterans and chronic pain patients demonstrates VR’s legitimate therapeutic potential while highlighting how corporate interests threaten to exploit even medical applications for profit.
Prose That Cuts and Caresses
Elaine Castillo’s writing in “Moderation” showcases her continued evolution as a stylist. Her sentences move with the precision of someone who understands exactly how much weight each word can bear. She captures the particular cadences of Filipino American speech and the technical jargon of content moderation with equal facility, creating a linguistic landscape that feels both specific and universal.
The author’s background in literary criticism, evident in How to Read Now, enriches her fiction writing. She layers cultural references and historical allusions throughout the narrative without overwhelming the central story, creating depth that rewards multiple readings.
Technology’s Double Edge
The novel’s treatment of technology avoids both utopian optimism and dystopian despair, instead presenting a more nuanced view of how digital tools reshape human experience. Virtual reality appears as genuinely transformative—capable of healing trauma and creating transcendent beauty—while simultaneously enabling new forms of exploitation and alienation.
Elaine Castillo’s insight into content moderation as labor proves particularly prescient. She reveals how the internet’s apparent seamlessness depends on an invisible workforce, often located in the Global South, whose job involves consuming the worst of human behavior to protect others from exposure. This hidden labor becomes a metaphor for broader patterns of how certain communities bear disproportionate costs for others’ comfort.
Minor Resonances and Missed Opportunities
While “Moderation” by Elaine Castillo succeeds admirably in most of its ambitions, some elements feel less fully developed. The corporate intrigue surrounding Reeden and Playground sometimes veers toward familiar territory about tech company malfeasance, though Castillo’s specific focus on VR content moderation provides enough novelty to maintain interest.
Certain supporting characters, particularly some of Girlie’s extended family members, could benefit from deeper development. The novel’s ensemble cast sometimes feels crowded, with several promising relationships and conflicts receiving less attention than they deserve.
The pacing occasionally struggles with balancing the romance plot against the broader technological and social themes. Some readers may find the corporate exposition dense, though Castillo’s prose quality maintains engagement even during more explanatory passages.
Literary Connections and Comparisons
“Moderation” by Elaine Castillo joins a growing body of literature examining technology’s impact on human relationships, including works like The Circle by Dave Eggers and Klara and the Sun by Kazuo Ishiguro. However, Castillo’s focus on Filipino American characters and content moderation labor provides a fresh perspective often missing from tech-focused fiction.
The novel’s romance elements recall the emotional intelligence of authors like Rainbow Rowell and Christina Lauren, while its cultural specificity and social analysis align it with writers like Erin Chung Kelly and Patricia Park. Castillo’s unique voice synthesizes these influences into something distinctly her own.
Similar Books to Consider:
“Severance” by Ling Ma – Corporate dystopia meets immigrant experience
“The Employees” by Olga Ravn – Work and humanity in speculative settings
“Such a Fun Age” by Kiley Reid – Class, race, and modern relationships
“Weather” by Jenny Offill – Climate anxiety and contemporary life
“The Memory Police” by Yoko Ogawa – Control, surveillance, and resistance
A Technology for the Heart
“Moderation” by Elaine Castillo ultimately argues that even in an age of virtual reality and algorithmic mediation, human connection remains irreducibly valuable and complex. Girlie’s journey from professional detachment to emotional engagement mirrors our collective challenge of maintaining authentic relationships in increasingly mediated environments.
Castillo has crafted a novel that works equally well as a love story and as social commentary, a testament to her skill at weaving together multiple narrative threads without sacrificing either emotional resonance or intellectual rigor. The book offers no easy answers about technology’s role in our lives, but it provides something perhaps more valuable: a nuanced exploration of how we might navigate these challenges with both wisdom and heart.
For readers of literary fiction who appreciate cultural specificity, technological awareness, and emotional intelligence, “Moderation” represents a significant achievement. Castillo continues to establish herself as a vital voice in contemporary American literature, one uniquely positioned to examine how global systems of power and technology intersect with the most intimate human experiences.
Disclosure: I received an advance reader’s copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.