Jem: The Science Fiction Novel the Literary Establishment Embraced
The National Book Foundation is celebrating the 60th anniversary of the National Book Awards by looking back at every one of its fiction winners, and the first contribution I’m making to the series is an appreciation of Frederick Pohl’s Jem, the first and only winner of an American Book Award (1980 was a strange year for the Foundation) for hardcover science fiction.
It’s only a few paragraphs, but I explain why the American Book Award for science fiction didn’t go along with the Hugo and Nebula commendations, and how certain aspects of Pohl’s novel find resonance with other authors from Charles McCarry and Ted Mooney to Jonathan Lethem and Junot Diaz. Unfortunately, it’s really hard to find Jem in the U.S., but if you put in the effort I’m pretty sure you won’t be disappointed.
13 August 2009 | read this |
You Gotta Watch This Jim Shepard Trailer
I’ve been looking forward to reading the first issue of Electric Literature for a while now, once I get some book review assignments turned in. But this three-minute animated film touting Jim Shepard’s contribution to the magazine, “Your Fate Hurtles Down at You,” pretty much clinches my plans for this weekend. Hell, I may even decide it’s time to take a work break this afternoon…
29 July 2009 | read this |