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Tag: historical fiction

Review: Michael Chabon’s “The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay”

The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay is an exceptional novel by a very smart author who doesn’t know when to shut up. Michael Chabon’s prose is densely literary, rife with cultural references, and brimming with insight and passion. Kavalier & Clay’s 600+ pages read like the internal monologue of the hyperactive lovechild of a […]

Book Review: John Steinbeck’s “The Grapes of Wrath”

It’s been ten years since I first read The Grapes of Wrath, and I now realize that my seventeen-year-old self was incapable of internalizing even a fraction of the tragedy and grace contained in this overwhelming story. A decade on, what was once fodder for my sophomoric literary intellect has recast itself as a narrative […]

Book Review: Susanna Clarke’s “Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell”

Susanna Clarke’s Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell is a bewitching but almost unbearably bloated novel. Deftly mimicking the oblique style of Jane Austen, Clarke resurrects the concerns, mannerisms and values of early-19th century England. Into this historical milieu she chucks a fabricated history of “English magic,” a longstanding but recently stagnant tradition waiting to be […]

Book Review: James Joyce’s “A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man”

I’ve never been partial to James Joyce, but consider it part of my due diligence as a committed reader to get to know him. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, widely considered his most accessible work, seemed like a good place to start. Joyce wields words carefully, opening the novel with stripped […]

Book Review: Naomi Oreskes and Erik M. Conway’s “The Collapse of Western Civilization”

This is definitely the best resource I’ve encountered for a crash course in the root causes of climate change and the potential negative outcomes if the global community continues to ignore the problem.  Naomi Oreskes and Erik Conway have condensed years of research into a tiny book––all the better to penetrate the noosphere of a […]

Book Review: David Mitchell’s “Cloud Atlas”

After several years of observing the barrage of praise that’s been heaped upon Cloud Atlas by friends and critics, I finally sat down to read it, convinced it couldn’t possibly live up to the hype.  One hundred pages in, I’d already dismissed David Mitchell’s well-loved book as nothing more than a garish, sprawling, unfocused coterie […]

Book Review: Pat Frank’s “Alas, Babylon”

Given the recent popularity of post-apocalyptic narratives, it seems a good time to pick up Pat Frank’s Alas, Babylon.  Frank’s portrait of a small Florida community coping with nuclear fallout is an early contribution to the genre, one that demonstrates considerable cleverness and technical merit.  Sadly, this story of Cold War-era anxiety and ingenuity has […]

Book Review: Neal Stephenson’s “The System of the World”

Of the many reasons I do not play chess, the main one is that I’m lousy at strategy.  I struggle to think more than one or two moves ahead, can’t easily reposition pieces in my mind’s eye, and am hapless when it comes to sniffing out and thwarting my opponent’s battle plan.  I’ve had similar […]

Book Review: Neal Stephenson’s “The Confusion”

Deeper into the wordy quagmire that is Neal Stephenson’s Baroque Cycle.  As with Quicksilver, this volume contains a considerable dose of magical moments dissolved in a nearly impenetrable sea of overdone gibberish.  It’s brilliant gibberish, but not brilliant enough to make this book shine the way I typically expect from Stephenson.  While enhancing the Baroque […]

Book Review: Neal Stephenson’s “Quicksilver”

It is always painful to write a negative review of a beloved author, but less so when the book in question is as desultory and tedious as this one.  Neal Stephenson is probably my favorite living author, but making it through the first volume of his Baroque Cycle (which is really three books in one) […]