Location:Canada
Pretty sure this is part of the rarefied pantheon of books joining the likes of Infinite Jest and A Brief History of Time as one of the most bought, least finished books of all time. It starts out strong with an almost singsong, Indian lilt and cadence as Gibreel and Saladin hurtle to earth - interestingly nonplussed by the whole affair. But then its dream sequences and odd digressions left me scratching my head - I just couldn't get my footing.
Rushdie clearly is an accomplished writer. Open the book to any page and the writing often dazzles and he's working here, juggling ideas and poking at concepts. Maybe it's my own expectations coming into the book - wondering what could be so damning as to warrant a fatwa against his life. But it never really gelled and for all the furor it engendered all it managed to elicit from me was mild indifference. If it wasn't part of a book club read I doubt if I would have finished it.
It seems the introvert, much like the geek, has garnered favour over the years. Even the the word itself is less a pejorative than it once was. Of course I'm on the internet, posting on a website focused on books ...maybe I'm experiencing a slight group bias.
Beyond these bookish walls it's clear we celebrate the Cult of Personality. TV hammers the idea home with outsized personalities armed with witty rejoinders while the news seems to adhere to the adage “he with the loudest voice wins”.
In the office we foster brainstorming, team rooms and open concept work environments.
At school we wring our hands if little Johnny prefers to be by himself while teachers preach “participation” with grouped desks and team work.
We're doing it wrong. When a good third to half of the world is made of introverts maybe it's time we go back to the honouring character instead of charisma, working in solitude, and appreciating quiet introspection. This isn't about being shy - being an introvert is all about how you respond to stimulation - especially social stimulation. Introverts can hold a room, speak to the masses, make their points heard - they just need to carve out some space to recuperate all that spent social capital.
So what's not to like about a book championing the thoughtful, bookish and unassuming with an entire chapter devoted to Asian deference? Susan Cain is one of us and you can't help but find yourself on the page.
I've never read any Neil Gaiman. I've even failed to crack the spine on a single Sandman. How dare I call myself a comic reader - my secret shame. Long past due to fix this oversight, I started in with American Gods. (10th Anniversary edition)
It's oblique in it's writing. It doesn't draw too much attention to itself and so it seems that the narrative happens in the periphery. Misdirection. I know already that I will be reading this again. If it wasn't for the fact it would ruin it for first time readers I could almost wish for an annotated, and illustrated version ala The Da Vinci Code. The etymology of Wednesday and the histories of the Egyptian gods rendered on the page.
Our protagonist Shadow has just been released after serving 3 years for aggravated assault, only to mourn the death of his wife. A car crash that killed her and her secret lover - Shadow's best friend. There's no reason for him to say no to the strange old man that fortuitously offers him a job. It's a vague sort of employment that eventually finds him in the company of gods old and new, a shadowy Agency and the spectre of his dead wife.
The old gods, immigrated from countries overseas, find America less than hospitable. They are tired and scrapping by in taxis, working in funeral homes, running cons and slowly going crazy. Supplanted by the shiny new gods of credit cards, internet and cable TV there seems to be an impending clash on the horizon.
The novel defies easy categorization, winning awards for science fiction, fantasy and horror. An American road trip, written by a Brit. An incredible novel from a comic book writer.
Middled-aged, hand wringing New York Jew falls for almost inappropriately young Asian girl? Stop me if you've heard this before. Set in some not too distant, post literate dystopia where people are glued to their mobile devices texting ackronymanically with ROFLAARP and TIMATOV while obsessing over their credit scores, rating each others fuckability in real-time and shopping at places called AssLuxury... It's just all too very. Maybe this sort of winking irony is just lost on me.
I do have to say that as an otherwise illiterate second generation, Westernized (corrupted) Korean I got a cheap thrill managing to translate the mangled Kor-Engrish sprinkled throughout. Mu-she-suh indeed.
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