Michael Chabon's Theory of Narrative.
There isn't going to be any hedging here. Michael Chabon sees himself as a make of
worlds. His second short story
collection is A Model World. His collection of essays on writing is Maps and Legends.
Chabon stitches his worlds together from monomyths and pop
culture trivia. He builds nerd
paradises. Even his most grounded and
realistic works, the painfully pubished_MFA_thesis.txt that is Mysteries of Pittsburg and the so much
cooler than thou Telegraph Avenue,
are peppered with characterful little nods to nerd trivia. In Mysteries
of Pittsburg, the protagonist's father works at the Baxter Building, better
known as the home of the Fantastic Four.
The antagonist of Telegraph
Avenue, in addition to riding around in a freaking blimp, has a nephew
named Feyd, you know, like the guy played by Sting in Lynch's Dune.
And then you get the noir detective novel set in an
alternate history Jewish homeland in Alaska or the tale of two sell swords
saving tenth century Khazaria from Vikings or the one where the kid from Oregon
has to recruit a baseball team to beat Coyote's team of giants and prevent
Ragnarok.
Chabon builds these worlds not as escapes, but as crucibles
in which to test an idea. He does this
most successfully in his novel about, paradoxically, escapism itself. The
Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay tells the fictional history of a
pair of 1940s Jewish comic book creators in New York City. In it Chabon chronicles their rise to comic
book stardom fueled by the troubles they try to escape from and then their
falls, brought about by their reticence to face their troubles head on.
Chabon's themes are clear even if his references are
obscure. The comic character that fuels
K&C's success is named the Escapist.
Okay, so his themes are more than clear.
They are right on the nose.
It's that clarity, along with all the nerdy references, that
makes me love the works of Michael Chabon.
Also, he wrote "Uptown Funk"
Also, his prose is beautiful.
Guys like Barth, Borges, Calvino, etc. are all better if you read their essays alongside their fiction. Same for Chabon, would you say?
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