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The cover of Careless People by Sarah Wynn-Williams, with images of Mark Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg beside it.
Mark Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg feature heavily in Wynn-Williams’s book about working at Meta

BooksMarch 24, 2025

When Zuck snubbed Key: Careless People by Sarah Wynn-Williams, reviewed

The cover of Careless People by Sarah Wynn-Williams, with images of Mark Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg beside it.
Mark Zuckerberg and Sheryl Sandberg feature heavily in Wynn-Williams’s book about working at Meta

Julie Hill reviews the Meta exposé written by the New Zealander who used to work there.

Sarah Wynn-Williams begins to get a sense that she isn’t in for a normal life when, at 13, she is munched by a shark.  

The Christchurch teenager is at the beach, on holiday with her family, and the nearest doctor is a 20-minute drive away. After a quick trip into town for some stitches, she returns to the campsite and proceeds to nearly bleed to death.  

As she begins to suffocate due to acute peritonitis, her parents, in one of the finest examples of Kiwi understatement ever captured in non-fiction literature, tell her she’s being dramatic. Her mother mumbles, “Mind over matter. Stop your hyperventilating.”  

It’s only when her eyes roll to the back of her head that her slightly too-relaxed parents finally spring into action, although her dad still checks the river for fish as they cross the bridge on the way back to the doctor. Spoiler alert: she survives.  

The shark brings Wynn-Williams many gifts, if by “gifts” we mean big shark bite marks on her torso and lifelong trauma. It also seems to ignite her already eldest-sister-of-four levels of ambition and determination into shooting flames. But the shark’s greatest gift, as far as the reader is concerned, is a truly unbelievable-seeming yarn and the ability to spin it.  

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— Deputy editor

No doubt, Wynn-Williams has had a lifetime of repeating the shark tale, and it shows: as a storyteller she has great chops. In her new book, Careless People: A Story of Where I Used to Work, she confronts another shark, though he is more often compared to a lizard or robot: Mark Zuckerberg, the founder and CEO of Facebook.    

Her book takes its name from The Great Gatsby, with Wynn-Williams playing the role of the less financially endowed Nick observing his glamorous friends. As F Scott Fitzgerald puts it: “They were careless people, Tom and Daisy – they smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness or whatever it was that kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they had made.” 

In her 20s, Wynn-Williams is in New York working for the United Nations. She is one of the youngest there and finds progress glacial. When she learns that Nemo the cartoon fish has been more impactful than the UN in terms of protecting the oceans, she sets her sights on Facebook.  

The company is in its infancy, and she is starry-eyed about its ability to inform and connect. “Like an evangelist,” she writes, “I saw Facebook’s power confirmed in every part of everyday life. Whatever Facebook decided to do – what it did with the voices that were gathering there – would change the course of human events. I was sure of it. This was a revolution.”  

She invents a job that doesn’t exist – global policy director – and spends two years convincing Facebook’s bosses that they urgently need her diplomacy skills. They very much disagree. But then the Arab Spring happens, and they start to see her point. One calls her to ask her how to respond. “We’re seeing calls for Mark to take some credit and we’re trying to figure out if he should.”  

When the Christchurch earthquakes strike in 2011, Wynn-Williams’ reporter sister survives being trapped in a building near Cathedral Square. Wynn-Williams uses the opportunity to again approach Facebook, to let them know how well it provided resources and information, and a lifeline when her sister was missing. Finally, she gets the gig. 

Next minute, Wynn-Williams is running through archeological ruins in Panama into the path of incoming galloping horses while wearing high heels, flying around on Zuckerberg’s private jet, being mobbed in Mumbai. 

This is long before Zuckerberg becomes a blue belt in jujitsu or takes his place among the herd of tech bros given front row seats to Donald Trump’s second inauguration. This is back in his hoodie era, when all his meetings had to be held after midday.  

The Social Network has just come out, with Jesse Eisenberg depicting Zuckerberg as less of a supervillain and more of a loveable dork. IRL, according to Wynn-Williams, he would play Settlers of Catan with his colleagues (who would let him win) and do Backstreet Boys’ ‘I Want it That Way’ at karaoke.  

“Most days,” Wynn-Williams writes, “working on policy was less like enacting a chapter from Machiavelli and way more like watching a bunch of 14-year-olds who’ve been given superpowers and an ungodly amount of money, as they jet around the world to figure out what power has bought and brought them.”  

In a toe-curling early moment of her tenure, Wynn-Williams is charged with greeting none other than New Zealand’s prime minister John Key. Unlike a recent trip by a German minister, who was as unimpressed by the building’s exposed air ducts as the company’s ethics, the New Zealand leader is raring to go and jazzed to get a selfie with the man himself. There’s just one problem: Zuck isn’t keen.      

After establishing their one degree of separation (Key knows Wynn-Williams’s sister), they run into Zuckerberg. “Hi Mark – did you want to meet the New Zealand prime minister?” asks Wynn-Williams, to which Zuckerberg replies, “No. I already said I definitely didn’t want to do that.”  

Once he becomes aware that Key is in fact standing right there, Zuckerberg shakes his hand and makes “what could generously be called polite conversation… if he weren’t so transparently annoyed”, writes Wynn-Williams. “The effort is felt by everyone.” But the man who unintentionally made Laser Kiwi a thing seems unfazed. When he meets the other bosses, he barely mentions policy. Everyone is there for the photo opportunity. 

Mark Zuckerberg meets John Key and apologises for being very late on his bills (presumably) (Photo: Twitter/X)

While Wynn-Williams paints a younger Zuckerberg with a vague pong, his chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg is very much his foil. Where he is disheveled, informal, pale to the point of transparent, she is charismatic, shiny, poised. Her 2013 book Lean In, a New York Times bestseller, expounds her view that, with just a few tweaks of our schedules and attitudes, women can be winners both at home and at work. It’s bullshit of course, and the emptiness of her philosophy is soon laid bare.    

Even grimmer, while the pair are on a work trip, Sandberg blatantly asks Wynn-Williams, twice, to come to bed with her. She has the same conversation with other junior employees. “Celebrity is the mask that eats into your face,” Wynn-Williams observes, and it appears Sandberg is past being eaten.  

Facebook chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg speaks during a Facebook event in 2018 (Photo: Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Another colleague is Joel Kaplan, formerly a policy adviser to George W Bush, who has since risen through Meta’s ranks to now being “Zuckerberg’s most trusted political fixer” according to a recent profile in the Australian Financial Review. Wynn-Williams writes that Kaplan makes a number of creepy comments, including asking her repeatedly “where she’s bleeding out of” when she suffers complications after giving birth.  

Her heavily filtered dream of a Facebook where democracy and transparency would prevail is far from the truth. As a company it’s unethical, illegal, casually dishonest, and it dawns on her that its actions are harming children, taking a wrecking ball to journalism and allowing misinformation to flourish.  

Wynn-Williams is on a private jet with Zuckerberg “the day he finally understood that Facebook probably did put Trump in the White House”. The catharsis comes only after a patient staff member explains it to him and, far from appearing dismayed, he starts to form his own presidential aspirations. 

Mark Zuckerberg, 33, was called to testify after it was reported that 87 million Facebook users had their personal information harvested by Cambridge Analytica, a British political consulting firm linked to the Trump campaign. (Photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Eventually Wynn-Williams turns whistle blower, filing a complaint alleging that Meta has misled investors by failing to reveal the extent of its dealings with China and its Communist Party. For its part, Meta states that she left the company eight years ago after being “fired for poor performance and toxic behaviour, and an investigation at the time determined she made misleading and unfounded allegations of harassment”. 

This week, the company successfully banned Wynn-Williams from promoting her book, including on RNZ’s Nine to Noon, after convincing the American Arbitration Association that it would face “immediate loss in the absence of immediate relief”.  

All of which has sent sales into the stratosphere. Earlier in the month, she snuck in a chat with the BBC’s Emily Maitlis of the iconic Prince Andrew “Woking Pizza Express” interview. And her publisher, Pan Macmillan, says it is “committed to upholding freedom of speech and her right to tell her story”.  

At a time when an unelected social media boss merrily leads a purge on the US federal workforce, Wynn-Williams gives us pause to reflect on the degree of power we’ve willingly bequeathed to a tiny group of weird billionaires. As a headline on The Guardian recently put it: “I knew one day I’d have to watch powerful men burn the world down – I just didn’t expect them to be such losers.” 

Just like that first shark encounter, working with Facebook was darker and more painful than Wynn-Williams could possibly have imagined. On the plus side, she got a bloody good story out of it. 

Careless People: The Story of Where I Used to Work by Sarah Wynn-Williams ($40, Macmillan) is available to order from Unity Books, or browse BookHub to see which indie bookshop has got it in stock near you.

The reconciliation of Oberon and Titania by Joseph Noel Paton, 1847. Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons.
The reconciliation of Oberon and Titania by Joseph Noel Paton, 1847. Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons.

BooksMarch 22, 2025

What is fairy smut and why is everyone obsessed with it?

The reconciliation of Oberon and Titania by Joseph Noel Paton, 1847. Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons.
The reconciliation of Oberon and Titania by Joseph Noel Paton, 1847. Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons.

Never heard of Acotar? Unsure what makes fairies sexy? Nervous of romantasy? Bemused by the term Medievalcore? Herewith is all you need to know about the hottest publishing trend of the age.

What is fairy smut?

Fairy smut is a genre of fantasy romance (romantasy) that includes both fairies and sex. If you pick up a novel and the blurb mentions anything to do with fairy courts, or fae lands, or faeries (or fairies) and fiery passion, then you’ve probably picked up some fairy smut.

Why are we talking about fairy smut?

Because it’s astonishingly popular. Unless you’ve been kept captive in the otherworld you’ll have heard of the term romantasy, and highly likely in the same sentence as the name Sarah J. Maas. Maas is one of the world’s best selling authors. In 2024 her publisher, Bloomsbury, recorded its highest sales year ever, largely down to Maas’s A Crown of Thorns and Roses series (Acotar as the fans call it) seeing a 161% increase in sales. Acotar is the book that launched romantasy – and the sub-genre of fairy smut – into the culture. In Maas’s fairy-dust-laced wake came blockbuster romantasies like Rebecca Yarros’s Empyrean series; the latest of which, Onyx Storm, became the fastest selling adult novel in 20 years when it was released in January this year. While Onyx Storm doesn’t have fairies as such, it does feature some compelling dragons (and leather, and sex. Let’s call it dragon smut.).

A box set of all of Sarah J. Maas' books in the Acotar series.
All the books in the bestselling Romantasy series known by fans as Acotar by Sarah J. Maas.

What is Acotar actually about then? 

“Feyre is a huntress. And when she sees a deer in the forest being pursued by a wolf, she kills the predator and takes its prey to feed her family. But the wolf was not what it seemed, and Feyre cannot predict the high price she will have to pay for its death…” So reads the blurb for the first in the Acotar series, A Crown of Thorns and Roses. It’s a beloved book, and Feyre a beloved character. Her story is compulsive, the world beautiful and the folk horny. 

In fact, many fans of Acotar whole heartedly reject the term “fairy smut” as a derogatory term for a genre that women, in particular, love. They see the term as a way to undermine entertainment that appeals predominantly to women and that celebrates women enjoying sex. 

Aotearoa book buyer at Unity Books, Melissa Oliver, says she’s sick of backlash against romantasy and it’s thanks to Sarah J. Maas that she was introduced to the fantasy genre at large: “I wouldn’t have read fantasy if I hadn’t have read her books.” Oliver says that one of the defining features of romantasy is that while you have the cornerstones of fantasy in great world-building and exciting plots, in romantasy “character is also so important.” Oliver says while the plots are thrilling there’s a lot of character-driver storytelling at the heart of it. This gives some clue as to why so many people around the world have connected to Acotar in particular: they can relate to a central, strong female character and get an anchor-hold in the epic multi-book story through what happens to her along the way.

Where does romantasy come from?

Sexy stories are as old as we are. Fairy stories, too. Fairy literature, however, flourished in the Middle Ages when stories of the otherworld shifted from oral storytelling traditions and into literary forms; and it flourished again in the Victorian period when fairy paintings became popular. Romantasy as we know it today draws upon centuries of storytelling about humans crossing into otherworlds, or those otherworldly beings crossing into ours, which is a foundation of the fantasy genre at large.

In the story of Sir Orfeo – dated to the late 13th Century – Orpheus must rescue his wife Heurodis from the fairy king who stole her from beneath a tree (likely apple, or cherry… sexy fruit) where she’d been napping. It was hugely influential retelling of the classical Orpheus myth but shifting the underworld to the otherworld and drawing in myth and legend of the fae which is deeply rooted in Celtic and British folklore. 

Sarah J. Maas has cited the 16th century Scottish tale, The Ballad of Tam Lin, as one of the inspirations for Acotar. Tam Lin hinges on the giving and taking of virginity and stars Janet (sometimes, Margaret – there are many versions of the legend given it was an oral tale to start with), who must travel to the otherworld to rescue Tam Lin, her true love, from the ferocious, fascinating Fairy Queen who is holding him captive in her court. 

Images of three book covers: Sylvia Townsend Warner's short story collection, Kingdoms of Elfin; Diana Wynne Jones' Fire & Hemlock; and Brian Froud's book about fairies with Alan Lee.
Sylvia Townsend Warner’s short story collection, Kingdoms of Elfin; Diana Wynne Jones’ Fire & Hemlock; and Brian Froud’s book about fairies with Alan Lee.

Once you start trying to locate the influence of fairy stories you can see them spiking popular culture across almost every decade from the Middle Ages on. Take the British writer Sylvia Townsend Warner’s 1977 collection of short stories, Kingdoms of Elfin, which is a startling series of tales about the hi-jinks in various fairy courts (one of which is called Elfhame, the Scottish Elf-home), their desirous natures, their militant societies, and sometimes, their cruelty. Wildly brilliant children’s writer Diana Wynne Jones wrote her own version of Tam Lin with her young adult novel Fire and Hemlock (1984).

New Zealand’s own Nalini Singh has been writing romantasy for years – not strictly involving fairies but there are some, and there plenty of changelings who seem fairy-adjacent. Elizabeth Knox had a huge hit in 2019 with her fantasy novel, The Absolute Book, which features the Sidhe, or the fairy realm.

Cult 80s film The Labyrinth starred Jennifer Connolly as Sarah – who, when you look from the lens of 2025, was clearly Medievalcore (those puffy sleeves, long hair, penchant for olde worlde books about goblins) and reads now as a surefire fan of Acotar. The Labyrinth follows the classic structure of young mortal having to cross into the otherworld to save a loved one (her baby brother Toby in this case) from a dastardly fairy Regent (Jareth, the Goblin King, played by David Bowie – a look, a personality etched onto every millennial’s mind in confusing ways).

The artist who created the goblins of The Labyrinth, Brian Froud, is a world renowned fairy artist and expert in fairy related folklore – his work also spawning acres of fan art, live events, parasocial interconnectivity and conversation about the ongoing role of fairies in our lives. 

A film still of Jennifer Connolly and David Bowie dancing in a scene in The Labyrinth film.
Jennifer Connolly and David Bowie in that ball scene in The Labyrinth. The film The Labyrinth was definitely ahead of its time being both Medievalcore and a touch Romantasy.

But why is fairy romance popular right now?

In an article published in the Guardian just this week, sex therapist Vanessa Marin says that so many of her clients were reading the Acotar books that she had to dive in too, to understand the appeal and the effect they were having. What she found was that the books were reigniting desire and reinstating sex as a joyous and fun experience, particularly for women who had thought they’d lost their libido.

It’s similar to the Bridgerton phenomenon which draws on the Regency period and the worlds of Jane Austen and pals to create a sexy fantasy version that will inevitably end up with fingering in a carriage

There’s also the escapism: romantasy novels, when done well, are easy to slip into. They’re fast, evocative and loaded with magic. The popularity of romantasy has affirmed that magical worlds don’t only appeal to kids – other worlds are the stuff of possibility, of high stakes, and can ignite the imagination.

The pleasurable side effect of holding such imagined worlds inside your own brain is that it can rub off on the real one. Romantasy fan communities flourish online and in person: Acotar has spawned a thousand meetups, whether through book launches, author conversations, Acotar festivals, Actotar themed events, and good old online chat forums via the likes of BookTok. Romantasy enables parasocial relationships, like-minded communion – real-world extensions of the literature itself.  

Romantasy, in short, can improve your quality of life. 

What has all this got to do with Medievalcore and what is Medievalcore?

Medieval motifs are central to romantasy, particularly the novels that involve fairies, dragons, your standard fantasy creatures which derive from Medieval literature, art and folklore. Romantasies like Acotar, and like Rebecca Yarros’s series, have contributed to what definitely looks like a revival of interest in both Medieval history and a Medieval-esque aesthetic (or often really a Pre-Raphaelite aesthetic – an art movement that blew up in the 19th Century and that drew on Medieval and Renaissance stories and aesthetics) that can be seen in the explosion of bloomers for sale, in Chappell Roan’s silky corseted gowns, velvets, long red tresses and swords.

Unity’s Melissa Oliver, says that she feels the Medievalcore trend in her bones. She’s noted that we’ve moved on from the boom in Ancient and Classical retellings and have shifted into what just might be a boom of Medieval retellings like For They Great Pain Have Mercy On My Little Pain by Victoria McKenzie which imagines the lives of famous Medieval women Margery Kempe and Julian of Norwich. Or like Lauren Groff’s novel Matrix which imagined in thrilling detail (and not a small amount of sex) the life of Medieval Abbess Marie de France (Groff drew heavily on the life of famous Medieval nun, Hildegard von Bingen). Oliver can also see Medievalcore start to go off in the YA space with books like Quicksilver by Callie Hart which Oliver says is flying off the shelves. 

Screengrabs of social media accounts. The first is a bookstack of Medieval books from Unity Books. The Second is an image of a Medieval looking girl reading, from the BBC.
Left: Unity Books posted a stack of Medieval books, both novels and nonfiction and declared a ‘Medieval Girl Autumn’. Right: The BBC used a distinctly Medievalcore image to along with their article on social media.

The fashion world is predicting that Medievalcore is the trend of 2025 which begs the question of what came first? The books or Chappell Roan’s pointy Medieval-esque hat or the Weird Medieval Guys Twitter handle that bred its own spinoff book, and a thousand other social media accounts plucking out funny/weird images from Medieval manuscripts and amassing huge followings? The more you look the more you can see the influence of Medieval art and aesthetics creeping around the culture: the feature image to a BBC article on the 40 most exciting books to read in 2025 shows a very Medieval-y woman reading a book, her hair plaited and wound up on her head, a wide frill collar on her dress. 

Left: Portrait of Margaret of York, on loan to the Medieval Women exhibition at the British Library; Southern Netherlands, c. 1468: Musée du Louvre, RF 1938 17 (©Musée du Louvre). And Chappell Roan at the 2025 Grammy Awards. Note, the hat.

Should I try some fairy smut?

Oliver says she sometimes encounters customers who are ashamed of their craving for romantasies. “Don’t be!” she implores. “They’re fun, they’re fast, there’s great stuff about home and family and friends being important. Read it for the fun.”

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Joel MacManus
— Wellington editor