Will Lavender

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The Weird Stuff

As you probably know, I love weird stuff. Fiction, movies, music–if it’s out of the ordinary, I’m likely to give it a shot. I just found the super-prolific genre magician Walter Mosely’s The Man in My Basement. It’s a good read so far–and yes, it’s very weird. The novel is about a black man who rents his basement to a strange, balding white man. At first things go as planned, and then they get…odd. The main character discovers that the man in his basement is building something. Something mysterious and potentially violent, something that may be intended for the main character himself. The novel is not a mystery, per se, but it’s extremely suspenseful, mostly because Mosley never tips his hand, never tells the reader exactly what’s going on. Infused in this subtlety is a highly-charged story of race and racism. It isn’t often that “thrillers” (and I’m going to call this novel a thriller) get to deep societal issues, but this is one of them. 

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Cory Doctorow’s New One

Just got into Cory Doctor’s new YA, Little Brother. It has to be said that I never read young adult fiction. Never. But I have been dying to get my hands on a good “science-fiction” (I’ll put that in quotes because I’m not sure that’s where Doctorow is heading with this book, as cutting edge and urgent as it is) for a long, long time. And there’s been a lot of buzz about this particular novel–and for good reason. It’s been a fantastic read so far. It’s about a kid named Marcus who is imprisoned after a terrorist attack. When he gets out, he finds that the world is under lockdown and everyone is being surveilled. Funny, hip, and damn informative–yes, I said informative. You can learn a lot by reading Doctorow; he seems to know everything there is to know about technology and how to hack into it. This is a highly recommended read that’s only been out for a short time. Even if you do not read much YA, I guarantee you’ll enjoy what Doctorow does with this highly original book. 

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The Conspiracy Thriller

I love paranoid conspiracy thrillers. I really enjoy the feeling that everyone in a particular story is a potential suspect. Strangely, there aren’t many writers who do nuanced novels of this variety. The books that come out of this school–and some are very fine–tend to be big, bloated, and way overwrought. They’re often global in the Tom Clancy/Robert Ludlum fashion…which is fine, but I’m always looking for a thriller that is more contained rather than blown up all over the map. The best I’ve found in recent years is Joseph Finder’s absolutely brilliant Paranoia. Not only is this a fun read (and it is very, very fun; this novel embodies the “page-turner” handle), Finder expertly shows what can be done using first-person. Not often do you see first-person stories that crackle like this one. The voice, the plot, the character–Paranoia is just an expertly accomplished thriller that is in a class by itself.  

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Lost in a Book, Pt. 3

Someone e-mailed me a suggestion of a novel that’s similar to the television show Lost: House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski. It’s a good example, mainly because the novel attempts to redefine the line of its own reality as the narrative progresses. I remember being drawn by the suggestion that House was a real manuscript when I first picked it up at Joseph-Beth Booksellers years ago. It’s a very scary (and flawed) novel about a strange house that seems to change dimensions once its owners move inside. Like Lost, it stretches genre: it’s essentially a horror novel, but sci-fi tropes abound. Also like Lost, Danielewski uses the false document theme to create “layers” in the story that supercede the constraints of reality. Good suggestion, reader. 

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Lost in a Book, Pt. 2

As I said below, there are hundreds of literary allusions in Lost. Some I recognize right away, others I have a vague notion about, and some slip right by me. The obvious ones — like Stephen King’s quartet The Stand, Carrie, The Langoliers, and The Shining – are referenced quite often. But one that I noticed in Season 2 was Flann O’Brien’s masterful surreal novel The Third Policeman. Lost fans would definitely be interested in this book, mainly because of how O’Brien uses and subverts issues of destiny and personal philosophy. Oh yeah. There’s also that strange “hatch”…

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Lost in a Book

As you probably know, I’ve just begun watching JJ Abrams’ television show Lost. The show is interesting on quite a few levels, mainly because it’s well-written and well-acted and just a good TV program. But it also has levels of mystery (and mysticism) behind it, and each episode and plot twist creates a ripple of fan involvement that borders on the obsessive. The show not only asks for fans to participate, it demands it — and for a person who’s always been interested in metafiction and textual experiments, this is highly interesting. I was thinking recently about a book that might be “Lost-like,” but really could not think of one. (Obviously, this is partly because literature does not hold the cultural currency television does.) The show borrows infinitely from literature, from its characters to its narrative tropes to its very ideas. But as for a book that contains so many unanswered questions, so many combinations of genres, so many mythical elements outside the text? I’m not aware of one. 

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Sports again. Oh yes, and race.

As you probably know, I’m a huge David Shields fan. He’s one of those rare writers who can be tremendously funny and scathingly intelligent in the same sentence. I think I’ve read everything Mr. Shields has done, but my favorite has to be his seminal Black Planet. This book is a gem, and it’s a gem because it manages to be about so many different things. Basketball and individuality and race and the Seattle Supersonics creepy mascot and family and journalism. It is really a fantastic book, and I believe it could be enjoyed by sports fans and non-sports fans alike. You can’t discuss American sports without talking about race, and in this book Shields gets to the heart of both matters. 

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Searching for Difference in the Thriller Genre

Sometimes I enjoy books and movies that are a little bit against the grain. (My wife hates when I go into the movie store alone; she always fears I’ll come out with something like this.) The disappointing thing about the thriller genre is that there aren’t that many unusual books out there. People tend to want the same thing, those old fall-back tropes–and that’s fine, because I enjoy those as well. But sometimes a person wants a little spice. The best I’ve found in this vein in the last few years are the novels of Ken Bruen. Bruen’s an Irishman, so you know the jokes–and the liquor–are going to be flowing. And flow they do. Bruen’s character are so vivid they jump off the page, and the voice ranges from devastatingly deep to achingly funny, sometimes in the same sentence. If you’re looking for something a bit different, a bit out of the ordinary, you can’t go wrong with Bruen and his feisty, deadpan-honest Jack Taylor.  

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A Great Book on Sports

As you know, I am a huge sports fan. From time to time I take a break from suspense novels and read a nonfiction sports tale. (My secret dream is to someday have enough notoriety where I can sell a sports book of my own.) One of the best I’ve read in recent years is Warren St. John’s story of his year following University of Alabama football in an RV, Rammer Jammer Yellow Hammer. One of the joys of the book is St. John’s candor when he speaks of his beloved team; there is a very controversial chapter, about midway through the book, where he relays a pretty scaring story of outright racism at a fan gathering. But the most interesting thing about the book is how St. John dissects what it is like to be a fan. I have thought many times about why it is that I follow sports. It’s so absurd (watching a bunch of guys throwing a ball and running after each other) that it’s almost shameful. But St. John speaks about fandom in generous, intelligent, thought-provoking ways in this book, and those sections are what makes Rammer Jammer Yellow Hammer a must read.  

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Michael Chabon: American Master

The American novelist Michael Chabon is approaching that rarefied place where he is accepted both in the canon and in popular culture as an exciting and relevant storyteller. Chabon’s novels are all brilliant, but his recent nonfiction title, Maps and Legends, is a great read as well. His essay about his failed second novel, Fountain City, is worth the price of admission. Chabon’s sentences are perhaps the best in the business. For me, he is one of those writers–like Faulkner, DeLillo, Neal Stephenson–who almost drives me away from the craft because you perpetually find myself thinking I could never do this! when I read him. But his plots and characters (and details; my God what details) are just as solid, just as stunning. In this book, he trains his exacting eye on other writers–most of them genre writers–who are meaningful to him. An enlightening, interesting, beautifully made book that you will sink into like a good novel.  

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