Michael Chabon Wins Hugo Award
August 11, 2008 at 6:33 am | In Awards, Books | 3 CommentsTags: Hugo award, Michael Chabon
Congratulations to Michael Chabon for taking home one of science fiction’s highest honors, the Hugo Award, for The Yiddish Policemen’s Union. I thought this was a fantastic piece of alternate history and also a great detective novel. It deserves all the awards it get, and Chabon deserves kudos for genre-busting and daring to venture outside the bounds of mainstream literature.
Michael Chabon previously won the Pulitzer Prize for his novel The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay.
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Monthly Reading: July 2008
August 1, 2008 at 9:25 am | In Monthly Reading, Reviews | Leave a CommentTags: Adventure, Comedy, Comic books, Dystopia, Elise Blackwell, Gary Troup, Historical fiction, Joshua Ferris, Lost, Margaret Atwood, Michael Chabon, Post-apocalypse, Science fiction
Oryx and Crake by Margaret Atwood — dystopian, post-apocalyptic science fiction
Then We Came to the End by Joshua Ferris — comedy
Gentlemen of the Road by Michael Chabon — historical adventure fiction
Bad Twin by Gary Troup — Lost-related fiction
Grub by Elise Blackwell — abandoned
Miscellaneous Reading: Completed The Dark Tower: The Long Road Home (5 issues) comic book series.
My rating scale:
- 1 star: Abandoned before finishing. Don’t waste your time.
- 2 stars: Poor. Avoid with extreme prejudice.
- 3 stars: Average. Read it, have a good time and move on. Or not.
- 4 stars: Great. Push it on your friends and family.
- 5 stars: Excellent. Keep it, treasure it, reread it.
Disclaimer: My ratings are very personal and may have little to do with the book’s artistic or commercial merit, or its place in the literary canon. Rather, the rating reflects how the story, characters and writing spoke to me and augmented my understanding of the world.
What Is Speculative Fiction?
April 11, 2008 at 12:34 pm | In Books, Genres | 5 CommentsTags: Alternate history, Cormac McCarthy, David Mitchell, Fantasy, Fiction, Horror, Jonathan Lethem, Kazuo Ishiguro, Magical realism, Michael Chabon, Michael Cunningham, Neil Gaiman, Science fiction, Speculative fiction
The kind of fiction I like to read the most, and that I tend to focus on here, falls under the broad umbrella of “speculative fiction.” I’ve never been entirely comfortable with the traditional genre labels of science fiction, fantasy and horror. The definitions that are most often applied to these genres seem so limiting, and they leave out a wide swath of really great books.
All three of these genres have one thing in common: The stories concern elements that do not exist in the so-called real world. In other words, they speculate about what might be possible but, in our everyday experience, isn’t.
In science fiction, the speculations must be grounded in the principles of science; they might not be possible now, but someday they could be, which is why science fiction is often set on future Earth or on another planet. The subjects of science fiction are space travel, dimensional travel, time travel, post-apocalyptic societies and technological innovations.
In fantasy, however, the speculations are usually based on magic and the supernatural. These speculations must follow rules, but they are not the rules of science. Generally, fantasy stories take place in imagined worlds (but not necessarily another planet) or on a fictional historical Earth.
Horror, on the other hand, most often takes place in the present day, in the world in which we live. But it introduces a fantastic or supernatural element, usually a monster of some kind. Horror also differs from fantasy in that it, by definition, should be frightening and dark.
But what about fiction that doesn’t fit neatly into one of these three categories? For instance, where would Neil Gaiman’s American Gods be classified? It is set in the modern-day world, but with its cast of mythical gods, it shades more toward fantasy than horror, although it does have horrific elements. Or what about David Mitchell’s excellent novel Cloud Atlas? This experimental novel is set in several different times, in the past, present and future, including a post-apocalyptic society. But it doesn’t read like traditional science fiction.
That’s where the label speculative fiction is useful. It covers any work of fiction that posits a “what if” question and then attempts to answer that question. That includes science fiction, fantasy and horror, plus narrower genres like alternate history and magical realism, as well as works that defy any neat label.
More contemporary writers who aren’t often associated with genre writing are stepping out of the bounds of literary fiction and into the realm of the speculative, and I’m glad because they are turning out some great works. For example, Michael Chabon’s The Yiddish Policeman’s Union is a fascinating alternate history, and one-third of Michael Cunningham’s Specimen Days is set on a future Earth, with aliens and space travel. I first started reading Jonathan Lethem via his genre-defying novels Gun, with Occasional Music, As She Climbed Across the Table and Amnesia Moon.
I like the speculative fiction label because it describes my favorite kind of writing but is much more open than the traditional genres. When I read speculative fiction, I can read hard sci-fi, traditional fantasy, contemporary horror or experimental literary fiction. The label also encourages good authors to experiment and stretch themselves without fear of being pigeonholed into an undesirable section of the bookstore. The stigma of writing about such subjects seems to have been dropped. For proof, just look at Cormac McCarthy’s Pulitzer Prize-winning (and Oprah Book Club pick) post-apocalyptic novel The Road or Kazuo Ishiguro’s foray into science fiction, Never Let Me Go, which was shortlisted for the Booker Prize and named one of Time’s 100 Best Novels of All Time.
Want to know more? Check out these sites:
Movie Adaptation News: The Yiddish Policemen’s Union
February 13, 2008 at 8:14 am | In Books, Movie Adaptations | Leave a CommentTags: Michael Chabon
Just found out from the A.V. Club (via my husband) that my favorite filmmakers, the Coen brothers, are going to be adapting my favorite book I read last year, Michael Chabon’s The Yiddish Policemen’s Union, for the big screen. I think it’s unusual for the Coen brothers to adapt other writers’ work, but they did such a great job with No Country for Old Men that I can’t wait to see what they’ll do with TYPU. Unfortunately, I guess I’ll have to wait, because they’ve got to make another movie first.
Monthly Reading: July 2007
August 1, 2007 at 9:56 am | In Monthly Reading, Reviews | Leave a CommentTags: Michael Chabon, Detective fiction, Alternate history, Ken Follett, Contemporary fiction, Marilynne Robinson
The Yiddish Policemen’s Union by Michael Chabon — alternate history detective novel
Housekeeping by Marilynne Robinson — contemporary fiction
The Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett — abandoned
Living the Simple Life: A Guide to Scaling Down and Enjoying More by Elaine St. James — not rated
My rating scale:
- 1 star: Abandoned before finishing. Don’t waste your time.
- 2 stars: Poor. Avoid with extreme prejudice.
- 3 stars: Average. Read it, have a good time and move on. Or not.
- 4 stars: Great. Push it on your friends and family.
- 5 stars: Excellent. Keep it, treasure it, reread it.
Disclaimer: My ratings are very personal and may have little to do with the book’s artistic or commercial merit, or its place in the literary canon. Rather, the rating reflects how the story, characters and writing spoke to me and augmented my understanding of the world.
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Worth Reading: The Yiddish Policeman’s Union
July 14, 2007 at 8:12 am | In Books, Reviews | 5 CommentsTags: Alternate history, Detective fiction, Michael Chabon
The Yiddish Policeman’s Union, Michael Chabon (2007)
5 stars!
Nine months Landsman’s been flopping at the Hotel Zamenhof without any of his fellow residents managing to get themselves murdered.
This is a remarkable work by an extraordinary writer, probably his best to date. At heart, it is a detective story — a very compelling mystery that begins when Detective Meyer Landsman is summoned to the room of a murdered man sharing the fleabag hotel where Landsman lives. Landsman is a detective for the Jewish police force in Sitka, Alaska, where Jews have been relocated following World War II, and the murder leads him into a complex and tangled conspiracy. Chabon has created an alternative reality that is completely believable and fascinating, and he spins out his story with such perfectly chosen language that the reader is compelled to slow down and savor every word, as much as you may way to tear thruogh and find out what happens next.
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