Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Review: Wonder Boys

Wonder Boys
By Michael Chabon
Random House 2008
368 pages
From my shelves

Wonder Boys

Grady Tripp is an English professor who has spent the past seven years writing his novel Wonder Boys. As the story opens, a writing conference is taking place on the campus where he works. This means that his editor is en route and will want to know the progress of his book. It also means that Grady will be expected to hobnob with his students at the chancellor's house, which might be easier if he wasn't having an affair with said chancellor right under her husband's nose. Oh, and his wife just left him on top of everything. Grady and company set off on a madcap adventure complete with a stolen car, a dead dog, and a Passover celebration that doesn't go quite as planned.

I thought this novel had quite a few moments of insight about the creative process and commitment to art. Grady had a successful first novel and has been trying to finish his next one for years...or maybe he's not really trying that hard. After all, it's hard to live up to that first success. He finds happiness in life intrinsically connected to the pages he has written. “This was the writer's true doppelgänger, I thought; not some invisible imp of the perverse who watched you from the shadows, periodically appearing, dressed in your clothes and carrying your house keys, to set fire to your life; but rather the typical protagonist of your work -- Roderick Usher, Eric Waldensee, Francis Macomber, Dick Diver -- whose narratives at first reflected but in time came to determine your life's very course.” 

The plot is interesting and your drive to keep reading basically becomes your disbelief that Grady can, in fact, dig himself out of these enormous problems he has created for himself. But the characters were disappointing to me. There are moments when Chabon seems to be trying too hard to make his characters outrageous. There is constant pot smoking. Grady is apparently interested in every woman he encounters and his editor appears to be attracted to every man who crosses his path. Unfortunately, that propensity to push the characters farther and father makes them seem unrealistic and unlikable.

Wonder Boys is a book that you really have to read to believe. Grady Tripp is one of the craziest characters I have yet to discover on a page, but that didn't mean that he was a character that I loved. Chabon is a great writer who crafts beautiful sentences seemingly effortlessly and takes his readers on amazing adventures. I just missed the whimsy and warmth that can be found in some of his later books.


Other books by Michael Chabon: Telegraph Avenue, The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay, The Yiddish Policemen's Union 

10 comments:

  1. I had similar feelings about the movie based on this book. I haven't read the book, probably because I didn't like the movie all that much...sounds like I might be able to pass altogether.

    Glad to hear this isn't representative of his other work!

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    Replies
    1. The first two of his novels that I read are still my favorite. I keep hoping that another one will match them but it hasn't happened yet! I would definitely recommend Kavalier and Clay or the Yiddish Policeman's Union.

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  2. I read this book Wonder Boys before, and I liked it, and it was help me to write my assignment, thanks for sharing this, I will recommend this blog to others.

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