Wednesday, January 6, 2010

BOOK: The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay


I've read Michael Chabon's work before in various short essay pieces in magazines and periodicals and, although they've been recommended to me before, I've never read one of his novels. I always found is expository writing witty and entertaining so I figured when a friend basically shoved one of his books in my face, I would like it.

If you read The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay, do it for no other reason than to see how a simple conversation between two characters can become a work of art. Chabon (pronounced "shay - bon") has the uncanny ability to capture tiny nuances and motivating details in a character's actions, looks, and past, and infuse them into the text during a dialog, with interrupting the flow.

The story centers around two cousins, Sammy and Joe, who join forces and talents - Sammy's in creating stories, Joe's with illustrating - to produce one of the 1940's greatest comic books. The Escapist, their bread-and-butter character is just the beginning. Before long the young men have a multitude of characters and titles at their disposal, not to mention a growing bank account.

Based in historical and chronological fact, this Pulitzer Prize-winning work of fiction is enjoyable for anyone who had a superhero fetish as a kid - Superman, Batman, Spiderman, Captain America, it doesn't matter! The history is interesting, the writing dynamic, and the plot changes are unpredictable. Much like I imagine the real Escapist's adventures would have been!

Sergio del Limonar

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