Doug Padgett
Doug Padgett
originally posted by Scott Kraft:
Interesting comment re: Chabon. I just finished Yiddish Policemen's Union. While it's a fun, stylish read, it lacks substance, as all of his work seems to. He appears to be our Martin Amis, so much talent and so little to write about, yet entertaining nonetheless. Pity.
I really don't like Martin Amis' work, though I do like some of his father's, but, though Chabon is not a crazy narcissist, I see why you make the comparison. Still, I disagree.
Chabon is not (maybe, and I'm not convinced really) a philosophical novelist, but he's a fine storyteller. He avoids a lot of the tiresome self-indulgence and solipsism of, well, some (see: Fortress of Solitude), and leaves the substance in the story. The patina of light-weighted-ness that adheres to him may be a result of his use of genre fiction in working through issues of family alienation, diaspora and nationalism, Jewishness....
I'm not his biggest fan, but I think he's a significant and--for me, someone who is largely disappointed in "serious" contemporary American lit--a welcome figure. Same for Cormac.