A film, “Little Fish,” based on University of Virginia alumna Aja Gabel’s short story about a mysterious illness causing a worldwide epidemic, was supposed to premiere in April 2020 at the Tribeca Film Festival.
The event was postponed, ironically, due to the real-life pandemic of COVID-19.
Now, almost a year later, with the coronavirus still raging, IFC Films will release the movie on demand and in theaters on Feb. 5.
Gabel’s story, adapted and expanded by screenwriter Mattson Tomlin, focuses on a young couple’s experiences in the near future as a previously unknown disease that wipes out people’s memories, dubbed “neuroinflammatory affliction,” spreads across the U.S. and the world. Directed by Chad Hartigan, it stars Olivia Cooke and Jack O’Connell.
A 2009 M.F.A. graduate of 鶹ƽ Creative Writing Program, Gabel wrote the story almost a decade ago and published it in Phoebe, a literary journal based at George Mason University, where it won a 2011 fiction contest. She published her first novel, “The Ensemble,” in 2018.
UVA Today reached out to Gabel, who currently lives in Los Angeles, about writing the story, the movie production and her time on Grounds.
Q. When did you actually write “Little Fish”?
A. I wrote it not long before it was published. I finished it in the spring of 2011. It was one of the very first stories I wrote during my Ph.D. at the University of Houston, and one of the few stories I can remember actually writing drafts of – like I remember where I was sitting and what the day was like each time I sat down to work on the story.
I think the memories of writing the story are so strong for me because I knew it was something unlike what I usually wrote, and something really special and raw for me. It’s the kind of thing that when it happens to you as a writer, you try to preserve the feeling for as long as possible. In some way, it taught me how to write like that from then on – how to write something different without being afraid.
Q. What inspired the story?
A. I was in a class on apocalyptic fiction with the writer and teacher Mat Johnson, and it was an assignment. I’d long been into apocalyptic films, but hadn’t translated that love into literature yet. Mat exposed us to a whole slew of different kinds of apocalyptic fiction and discussed with us how the tropes and concerns of the genre worked on different levels.
I’d particularly loved the book “Blindness,” by José Saramago, and had that in mind while writing, as well as the film “Children of Men.”

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