Sorry, you're gonna have to hear from me more than once this week. But the fact is, I just finished re-reading this book, and if I don't write about it now, I think I'll burst;

The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay. It may very well be the best American fiction novel published in a decade that gave us masterpieces such as The Road and The Corrections, and its my Summer Reading recommendation for this month-I'll give ya four weeks to read this fucker before I strongly suggest another one in July. This is a book you will love. I'm making that statement without qualification, without denoting that you will enjoy it if you're a fan of this genre or that style. You will love this book no matter what. And don't be givin' me no lip about the 640-page-length. Read about 60 pages (roughly an hours worth) per day, and you'll be done in 11-12 days. And besides, I didn't hear you bitching when you plowed through the Harry Potter series, young man/and/or lady!
Chabon's main characters are two teens growing up in the 1930's Joe Kavalier, a stoic, fiercely impulsive refugee from Nazi-invaded prague, and his cousin, Sammy Clay, a polio-stricken, nebbishy Brooklyn boy. When Joe comes to live with Sammy, together they decide to write comic books (quickly becoming a profitable novelty in the states) for loose change, ultimately authoring a hit five-n'-dime series called The Escapist. They're content to bang out simplistic, anti-German propaganda pieces until Chabon introduces throws two more people into the mix; Joe's lover Rosa Saks, a wealthy, impassioned liberal who might be able to bring his still-trapped relatives over to America; and Tracy Bacon, a flirtatious radio star who causes Sammy to question his sexual orientation and his lot in life. It's here, as the emotional complications start to pile up between the boys and their romances, that the membrane between fiction and fact is permanently permeated, and Kavalier and Clay's art begins to resemble a barely modified rendition of their own lives.


I've cried reading two other books; the final Harry Potter and Ray Charles's autobiography. This one made me weep the first time through, and tear up after my second reading. I can boil my opinion of this work down to two "W" words: Wrenching and Wondrous.

You must read some Chabon this summer. Ah, but what author must *I* expose my self to during the hot months of the year?
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I'm telling you, after Slaughterhouse!
ReplyDeleteI might just have to read Kavalier and Clay, this was pretty convincing! Oh, and you have to become acquainted with Rabbit.
OOH this makes me happy! :) WIN! and loan me rabbit run and i'll read it during mah waco trip :D
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