akujunkan: (TWIB)
[personal profile] akujunkan
Surpringly, I managed to read two books during the final week leading up to the Hell Thesis deadline, both of them extremely good. They are:

Fatal Light - Richard Currey
Two comments about Fatal Light: 1) This may be the best war novel I have ever read; 2) People who criticize this novel for its paucity of main character description (to say nothing of development) are missing the point. A corollary: The second point is directly responsible for the first.

1) Fatal Light's plot is the plot of every war novel you've ever read: a young man, innocent and full of dreams is changed by the brutality he experiences fighting a war in a far off land. The difference here is that Currey's narrator is barely there; as do all war novel protagonists, he speaks of his childhood, his first love, his fellow soldiers, his experiences on the battlefield, on leave, in the hospital, but with little attempt to provide back story or narrative continuity. Currey's protagonist is essentially narrating this story to himself, which means there's no need for him to fill in the particulars because he already knows them fully well.

But we readers, of course, cannot know this information, with the end result that it is simply not provided. In most novels, this would be the kiss of death. Here, it is what makes Fatal Light extraordinary. Why? Because any war novel with a defined protagonist is as much about the protagonist as it is the war it's set in--what happened to the protagonist, how the protagonist's friend Johnny XYZ did or didn't pull through, if the protagonist survived this or that battle, how his family reacted when he came home. It is precisely because Fatal Light's protagonist is barely there that the novel truly becomes about the Vietnam War and not just a few of the people to whom it happened.

The same can be said for the plot. Because there's so little emphasis on the main character, the plot is not about how one man was strong enough to overcome the odds or too sensitive to withstand the horror, it's about the horror of the war itself, the damage it causes to everyone and everything in its path, which is perhaps the truest depiction of war possible. Finally, Currey's prose is so beautiful and atmospheric it defies description. This is one of the most powerful books I have read in quite some time. Read this book.

2) The Hunger Games - Suzanne Collins
Believe the hype. Believe all of the hype you have read about this book. It really is That Good. Collins is one of the few young readers/young adult authors who can actually write about violence and psychological horror in such a way that it's appropriate reading for ten-year-olds but doesn't insult their intelligence either. Her prose appears simple and straightforward at first glance, but there is a lot going on under the surface; indeed, one of the reasons it appears so simple is because Collins trusts readers to make connections and extrapolate motivations and emotions on their own, instead of holding their hands to make sure they're understanding everything correctly.

Not only does The Hunger Games rise above its potentially ho-hum premise (namely: what if reality shows like Survivor were actually played for life-and-death stakes), but it does so while rarely resorting to the deus-ex-machina and happy coincidences on which so many other authors depend to move their stories forward. This is one of the most tightly plotted novels I have read in quite some time, and its narrative development rarely strains credibility. And then there is Katniss, the protagonist and narrator of the novel. I cannot put my love for this protagonist into words. Far from being some ineffective disney princess, Katniss is tough, resourceful, doesn't put a premium on being fashionable or "nice" (or secretly wish in her heart of hearts that she was either of those things), and who spends a fair portion of the novel helping the knight in distress. Better yet, it's entirely believable; Katniss is neither superhumanly gifted nor written to some misguided idea of a "feminist protagonist" checklist. She is a supremely natural and sympathetic character.

The world needs more fiction like this. Go read this book.


That will be all.

on 2009-09-15 10:11 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] wombatdeamor.livejournal.com
should there be a comma after "stairs" or is it a good thing that I imply he has an erection?

on 2009-09-29 06:40 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] wombatdeamor.livejournal.com
hey while we're talking about terrible fiction, can you get me the link for that story all those guys wrote blindly to prove that the publisher was a vanity press? There's actually a publishing unit in my poetry class (score!) and he's gonna try to steer us in the right direction, and my prof seems like the sort of person who would appreciate the joke. I'm confident that my lack of clarity will not be a problem for you.

on 2009-09-30 03:43 am (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] akujunkan.livejournal.com
Your lack of clarity is referring to Atlanta Nights (http://www.travistea.com/), which remains one of my favorite pieces of fiction EVER.

on 2009-10-01 06:17 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] wombatdeamor.livejournal.com
I have to buy a copy of this book...I can't remember if you gave us a copy or not on the computing machine. I'm so totally going to send this to Dr. kalamaras. if he doesn't think that is hilarious, I will lose all respect for him as a teacher. I'm not familiar with any of the authors that contributed to it, though. Any recs out of the list?

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