Dedicated to classics and hits.

Wednesday, August 30, 2023

The Last Confession of Slyvia P. (2022) by Lee Kravertz

 1,001 Novels: A Library of America
The Last Confession of Sylvia P. (2022)
by Lee Kravertz
Belmont, Massachusetts
Massachusetts: 6/30

      I'm well into Massachusetts in the Audiobook portion of the 1,001 Novels: A Library of America project- the Audiobooks run ahead of the e-books and actual books because fewer than half of the titles are available as Audiobooks.  The Last Confession of Sylvia P. is an interesting novel by a debut author about- yes- you guessed it, poet-novelist-all-around-icon Sylvia Plath. Kravertz weaves historical fact and fiction together to tell the story of a hand written manuscript of The Bell Jar which is discovered during a house flip in the Boston area in 2019.  Kravertz travels backwards and forwards in time and invents several interesting characters- some real some fictional.  There's Robert Lowell, the real life poet, Boston Rhodes, a fictional antagonist who writes a similar style of poetry and Ruth Barnhouse, a pioneering psychiatrist (by pioneering I mean she is a woman psychiatrist in the 1950's, who treats Plath during her tempestuous teen years.

      And although The Last Confessions does of course go deeply into issues related to being a young woman and grappling with mental illness, it does so within the context of world-renowned poets, instead of being about another sad working class mom abandoned by the alcoholic father of her children- which is seriously the plot of about 20 percent of the books in the 1,001 Novels project up to this point. 

Zone One (2011) by Colson Whitehead

 Book Review
Zone One (2011)
by Colson Whitehead

  I think if you had to look at the top two authors to combine genre writing with literary fiction it would be 1) Kazuo Ishiguro because he won the Nobel Prize- not known for their embrace of genre-fiction embracing literary fiction and 2) Colson Whitehead- because he won the National Book Award AND the Pulitzer for Underground Railroad- a bold take on the alternate-history genre of science fiction.  His success with Underground Railroad was presaged by The Intuitionist, his debut novel and this book Zone One, his 2011 foray into Zombie-bit.  

  I read Zone One when it came out- bought the hardback first edition- but never wrote about it for this blog.  After listening to his latest book on Libby, I saw the Audiobook for Zone One and thought, "Hey, that looks fun!"  And it is, intermittently- the key difference between this book and his award winners is that this book is less concerned with telling an actual story and reads more like a work of literary fiction/experimental fiction set in a genre world than an actual attempt to fuse the two things- which his books after this point have accomplished as witnessed by their price winning status and universal acclaim. 

  What the reader gets in Zone One is basically a series of flashbacks where the protagonist muses about the lost world, spelled with episodes set in a post-zombie reconstruction lower Manhattan, where civilian-military personnel are mopping up, building by building after the Marines accomplished the heavy lifting.  Mark Spitz, the narrator, wasn't much in the world before, in the world after, he like, everybody else, is a survivor par excellence. If you take out the flashbacks, the story can be summarized in a sentence, but that also functions as a spoiler, so.  

Venomous Lumpsucker (2022) by Ned Beauman

 Book Review
Venomous Lumpsucker (2022)
by Ned Beauman

   There are a couple ways I keep track of what books I want to read- the first tier is the New York Times book section, the reviews that appear in the Guardian and the publications I have in my feedly- Publishers Weekly, Kirkus, etc.  Second tier is the nominees and winners for a host of literary prizes- The Booker Prize is my number one, then the National Book Award then the secondary awards- usually just the winners.  The Arthur C. Clarke award, which was established in 1987 for the "best science fiction" book published first in the UK in the preceding year.   If you look at the past winners you've got a pretty good guide to the important stopping points in the continuing intersection of science fiction/genre and literary fiction.  Previous winners include trailblazers like Margaret Atwood- The Handmaidens Tale was the original winner in 1987, Bruce Sterling, Neal Stephenson, Emily St. John Mandel, Colson Whitehead and Namwali Serpell- all authors who are widely read by the general reading audience for literary fiction.

   Venomous Lumpsucker by Ned Beauman was the Arthur C. Clarke prize winner this year.  I checked it out from the library in an e-book when I read the announcement, only to learn that I'd checked it out when it was originally released and didn't actually read it. Beauman is another science fiction/literary fiction cross-over author.  His 2011 book, The Teleportation Accident made the then Man Booker Prize longlist. 

    Like many succesful works of cross-over literary/science fiction, Venomous Lumpsucker dwells in a future that is close enough to be described with the vocabulary of the present, but different enough to evoke interest.  The world of Venomous Lumpsucker is recognizably a variation on "the not so distant future," global warming/climate change continues unabated, but the United Nations has somehow managed to set up a binding system of extinction credits to manage the competing needs of economic growth and environmental protection but you probably don't need me to tell you how that is going at the beginning of the book.

   The two major characters are Karen Resaint, a hired gun who helps companies manage the extinction process and Mark Halyard, the employee of an Indian mining conglomerate charged with their end of what Resaint calls, "the extinction industry."  The plot is set in motion by a surprise attack on a "bio-bank" used by governments and corporations to store the genetic data of now extinct species.  The bio bank is wiped out.  The value of extinction credits goes up by a factor of 10 (50,000 to 500,000) over-night, which leads to complications for Halyard, who is now caught in a semi-illicit act of arbitrage which centers on the work done by Resaint.  My feeling is that the sophistication of the set-up- which involves an university level of contemporary economics- should be enough to intrigue a potential reader if the pedigree of the Arthur C. Clarke.

  The action that follows the set up isn't particularly inventive, but the reader is carried along by the richness of the world Beauman described- down to his coy use of the term The Hermit Kingdom to describe what has happened in the United Kingdom- a transition that mostly remains off stage until the exciting conclusion of the book. 






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