Selected Product: | The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay Paperback Author: Michael Chabon Publisher: Picador Release Date: 2001-08-25 ISBN-10: 0312282990 ISBN-13: 9780312282998 List Price: $15.00 Average Customer Rating: | | The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao ISBN-10: 1594483299 ISBN-13: 9781594483295 List Price:$14.00 The Yiddish Policemen's Union: A Novel (P.S.) ISBN-10: 0007149832 ISBN-13: 9780007149834 List Price:$15.95 Gentlemen of the Road: A Tale of Adventure ISBN-10: 0345502078 ISBN-13: 9780345502070 List Price:$14.00 The Mysteries of Pittsburgh: A Novel ISBN-10: 006168757X ISBN-13: 9780061687570 List Price:$10.00 The Final Solution: A Story of Detection (P.S.) ISBN-10: 0060777109 ISBN-13: 9780060777104 List Price:$12.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay by Michael Chabon (ISBN-10: 0312282990, ISBN-13: 9780312282998). At this time we have not yet written a review for The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay by Michael Chabon (ISBN-10: 0312282990, ISBN-13: 9780312282998). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com
This brilliant epic novel set in New York and Prague introduces us to two misfit young men who make it big by creating comic-book superheroes. Joe Kavalier, a young artist who has also been trained in the art of Houdiniesque escape, has just smuggled himself out of Nazi-invaded Prague and landed in New York City. His Brooklyn cousin Sammy Clay is looking for a partner to create heroes, stories, and art for the latest novelty to hit America the comic book. Inspired by their own fears and dreams, Kavalier and Clay create the Escapists, The Monitor, and Luna Moth, inspired by the beautiful Rosa Saks, who will become linked by powerful ties to both men.
Chabon vents his issues | Customer Rating: | Reading this book is sort of analogous to having a days-long therapy session; this is something I see as both a strength and a weakness. I don't think many people would deny Chabon's strength as a storyteller, but, like Quentin Tarantino's movies, his single-minded obsessions often come out as stronger than the characters would have realistically experienced them. Chabon is pretty good at hiding this sort of writing-as-katharsis impulse, but there are a few points in the book where you're reading about comic books, Jewish oppression, and homosexuals, and wondering if this is a book or a confessional.
As a story about two Jewish cousins who write comics, one of them a homosexual, this is a concern that runs through the length of the novel, even if the concern is a minor one.
I sometimes find myself swayed by the power of final pages and final sentences, and this book really delivered what I wanted. Satisfying, not entirely happy, not expected; strength at the same time as surrender. Chabon seems to understand the art of making near-heroes out of characters at one time both extraordinary and self-destructively passive. | Great Fiction | Customer Rating: | | Fabulous example of what fictions does best. Reading this intelligent, highly creative novel will introduce you to a cast of characters you would never have the pleasure of meeting in "real" life and take you to times and places you couldn't otherwise experience. The humor, sincerity, and inventiveness of Chabon's writing will capture your imagination from the early pages and sustain you throughout. Even at over 600 pages, you'll be sad to say goodbye. | The Most Super of All Powers | Customer Rating: | A beautiful book about Sammy and Joe, two cousins who end up writing and drawing comic books together, the Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay is a staggering tale of dedication, commitment, human frailty, perseverance, loyalty, and the many faces of the most powerful of all super powers, love. it shows the power of the love and appreciation of art, the power of family, the power of ethnicity, and the power of dreams. There is a riff early in Kavalier and Clay in which Sammy throws out ideas for heroes that is a hilarious send-up of super powers. Chabon knows that Sammy knows from the beginning that he has the power of his dreams, the power of his loyalty, and ultimately the power of love that will carry him through adversity to find happiness. Joe on the other hand must face the unimaginably grim reality of leaving everyone he loves behind to face the Nazi horrors. There is never a mystery about what Joe's loved ones face, and we feel along with him the guilt of his finding new people to love in the America of the mid-20th Century, a place of amazing opportunity and amazing charlatans. Chabon destroys the idea of nostalgia by exposing some societal norms that border on the Nazism that the characters set out to fight, each in his own way. The book is set in a particular time and Chabon does not glamorize that time, just portrays it honestly.
Normally I view the Pulitzer Prize as an enormous badge of mediocrity. Look how many books chosen for it have fallen from fashion, never to darken the door of literature beyond their meager days in the sun. Yet with Kavalier and Clay the pretentious puffer fish of the Pulitzer Prize committee plucked a plum. This novel will stand because of Chabon's marvelous wordcraft, and the most super of all powers. | Irritating Zig-Zags | Customer Rating: | | I like the writing in this book. I like the characters in it. It took me to a different time and place. The characters are rich and complex. I cannot, however, recommend this book. It has many sub-stories within its main storyline. Many of them are never resolved. They just fade away. The book zig-zags all of the place. I finished four-fifths of the book and gave up. I got tired of twists and turns that ended nowhere. | Comic history in the making | Customer Rating: | Kavalier and Clay are Jewish cousins, Clay (morphed from Klayman) a short New Yorker crippled by polio, Kavalier a tall brooding escapee from Europe just before Hitler locked the gates and opened the extermination lines. The day after Kavalier's surprising arrival in New York, after his amazing escape from Europe via Japan and San Francisco, Sam and Joe launch the multi-million dollar earning Escapist comic book line in a combination of daring, talent, and brinksmanship bluffing.
The rest of the book is the story of how they survive success and conquer failure. The book reads quickly, with only an uncomfortable homosexuality subplot to ruin the enjoyment of the interaction between the cousins and the bubbling potboiling excitement of the early days of comic books in the 1930 and 1940s. |
|