We love to complain that the world sees SF/F as unworthy of serious regard, but is it true?
At Atlantic Monthly online:
So, if the highbrow are partaking of pop culture for a little hybrid vigor, will pop culture fans embrace our new literary cousins? Has anyone read The Passage? Will you pick up copies of Zone One and Red Moon when they hit the bookshelves? Does your average SF/F fan really want to read literature with "stylistic and tonal complexity"? I know I avoided Cormac McCarthy's The Road but mostly because I heard it was relentlessly depressing. The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao was fantastic though (and pretty relentlessly depressing - no real supernatural stuff either, just a story of a geek's life, chock full of geek references.) But The Passage was the best post-apocalyptic thriller I've ever read (yes, including The Stand, which I thought was one of King's weaker early works), and I'm waiting with bated breath for the sequel. If Zone One and Red Moon are that sort of book - I'm there!
At Atlantic Monthly online:
But now, only eleven years into a new century, American literary culture has undergone a sea change. A group of high-profile literary writers have fled the place we call "real life"—and their numbers are growing. Literature shelves now commonly feature Halloween party staples: Zombies, werewolves, and vampires; hardboiled gangsters and private sleuths; space aliens with high-tech gadgets. Today's serious writers are hybrid creatures—yoking the fantasist scenarios and whiz-bang readability of popular novels with the stylistic and tonal complexity we expect to find in literature. Meet the New Mutants of American fiction.
So, if the highbrow are partaking of pop culture for a little hybrid vigor, will pop culture fans embrace our new literary cousins? Has anyone read The Passage? Will you pick up copies of Zone One and Red Moon when they hit the bookshelves? Does your average SF/F fan really want to read literature with "stylistic and tonal complexity"? I know I avoided Cormac McCarthy's The Road but mostly because I heard it was relentlessly depressing. The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao was fantastic though (and pretty relentlessly depressing - no real supernatural stuff either, just a story of a geek's life, chock full of geek references.) But The Passage was the best post-apocalyptic thriller I've ever read (yes, including The Stand, which I thought was one of King's weaker early works), and I'm waiting with bated breath for the sequel. If Zone One and Red Moon are that sort of book - I'm there!