2020-06-16
Moondance
Author
American literary star who first hit the headlines at age 25 with 'The Mysteries of
Pittsburgh' (1988) and hasn't looked back. Awards aplenty including the 2001 Pulitzer for 'The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay.' More recent forays into genre fiction (fantasy, sci-fi, mystery, alternate history) have received a mixed reception.
Motivation
Sitting with his dying grandfather listening to hitherto untold stories of his life, the old man's tongue loosened by opioids.
Result
Fictional memoir by unnamed writer relating stories heard from both grandparents, who have withheld a lot of truth from each other. Filled with looping, interlinked, and at times fantastical tales of derring-do and misadventure.
Themes
Truth and lies, what pulls us apart and keeps us together, the US Space programme, the Jewish experience, yada, yada.
Prose
Sublime, rich with metaphor, and funny. A tad too much metafiction for my liking but oh so clever.
Bottom line
A wonderful storyteller with a short attention span. Individual episodes crash into each other rather than flow smoothly one to the next. Fans of Vonnegut will appreciate this; fans of James Patterson not so much.