Rating:  Summary: A book you'll tell people about forever Review: The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay wasn't just a book about comic books - it was a book about growing up, dreaming about where you'll go - and about finding yourself in a totally different place - under circumstances you could never have imagined. This is an epic story; I read it before it was awarded the Pulitzer - and actually screamed aloud on the street when I saw that it had won. I was so pleased. This book guaranteed itself a place in history long before it won any awards. The best advice I can give you is to buy it in hardcover - it is one of those books you'll be happy you did.
Rating:  Summary: Not Just for Comic Lovers Review: This book isn't really about comic books and the people who love them; it's a far more universal tale about the search for identity. The book focuses on people in a particular pursuit, but what book doesn't? Read this book to meet credible, interesting characters who live through an oft-neglected cultural development.
Rating:  Summary: I can't believe this won the Pulitzer. Review: The only reason I finished the book is so I could feel qualified to write a review, and express my distaste for the writing. My impression is that Mr. Chabon has an overly developed verbal capability, but has nothing of any substance to say. The plot and character interaction were juvenile, the writing style overly embellished, and the book was much too long. Finishing it was a truly painful experience. The Pulitzer has lost all credibility.
Rating:  Summary: Gorgeous language, witty fiction with tears in laughter Review: I got a very mixed feeling after finishing this wonderful book. On one hand this fiction itself was like a comic book, fun and fast, sometime fancy and fantastic. On the other hand it was a sad story indeed.To be simple, this book talked about how two genius teenagers endured the WW2. Timespan of this book was more than 10 years. During this period so many things happend, some were controlled by themselves (their creation Escapist, their feats on the Golden age of Empire Comic), but a lot of time they were only shaped, could not help but, and changed by the surrounding. The plot and the skill were quite excellent-- The whole 600+ pages just surrounded a word "Escape". In a sense, owing to the war-time and their personalities, each charater in this book tried their own way to escape the reality. But in fact they could do nothing but were inevitably altered by the time and the era. The only "charater" who really escaped was the Golem, in the form of a box of sand (how ironic). The struggle and the helplessness of human, in my opinion, was the most memoriable part of this story. And The story was so vivid-- In fact I browsed the searching-engine for many times during my reading session, in order to make sure if the statements in this book was real, or only fictitious. Both two main charaters were quite real and almost tangible. The image of Joe and Sam were very strong. And Chabon's language was so extraordinary that the beautiful words and sentences and paragraphs poured toward me all through the book. In fact the language in this book maybe was the most beautiful one among many books I've read in recent years. BTW, this book testifies the high standard of the Plitzer award. Highly recommended.
Rating:  Summary: Heartbreakingly beautiful Review: This book is written with such poetry and punch. I couldn't put it down, and thought about it long after I finished it. Michael Chabon uses breathtaking imagery to transport readers to Prague, New York, the barren Antarctic, and into the hearts and minds of his characters. I'm not even a comic book fan, but I found myself riveted by the storylines. This book is for anyone who appreciates an incredibly-written story. This is the most beautifully written book I've read in a very long time. Quite deserving of its Pulitzer!
Rating:  Summary: A rare character-driven novel Review: Don't listen to anyone who tries to tell you this book is about the comic book industry, or New York, or WWII. It's about the characters first and foremost. And don't listent to those who say it is a rambling epic with no big theme. It has a very simple and beautiful theme of the choices we make in life to escape from the world, others, and ourselves. I have not encountered such robust and real characters since Anna Karenina. And the author's style is unbelievable, it lets the story shine through, but when you look back you realize how much care it took to do that. There's something special here if you look for it, or rather feel for it.
Rating:  Summary: kavalier & clay: a great book... Review: kavalier & clay: a great book to read. i loved it. definitely not a book to read within one sitting, but it is well worth it.
Rating:  Summary: Utterly fantastic Review: Kept debating whether to spend my time with this book: a number of impressive awards (they don't come much bigger than the Pulitzer); but a story about 2 comic book artists? How interesting can that be? After the first 3 chapters, I was completely hooked. So many themes interwoven into the plot. And, the plot is anything but boring. Far more than a story of 2 comic book creators, this is a story of WWII, the Holocaust, and bigotry of all types. Incredible and highly recommended!
Rating:  Summary: You have to give this book some thought Review: The funny thing is that as I started to write a very negative review then I began thinking more and more about the story. It kind of snuck up on me, but now I realize I really did like this book. When I first finished reading it I did not like it at all, this was a couple of days ago. Once I started to really analyze the story, however, I realized how well it truly works. There are parts that I would have chosen to emphasize and develop more than the author had. For example, the Gollum, there was so much potential there and nothing was really done with it. It also was just depressing at times. I just did not like at all what happened with the brother (I am trying not to give too much away in this review). About half way through the book it started to wander. I felt that it really started to drone on and on. I couldn't help but wonder where the heck the author was taking me. If, however, you suffer through that part you actually get to a pretty good conclusion. Just remember it may take a bit of time and thought to appreciate the story. Overall I would think the book is worth a read. In fact, of all the Pulitzer winners I have read this ranks up there as one of the better ones. The prize was well earned by this author.
Rating:  Summary: Overblown and Overwritten Review: In the impetuousness of our youth, many of us make critical decisions - "complicated solutions to insolvable problems" as one of the characters in Chabon's novel muses - that bear bitter fruit for years to come; that precept is one of the central themes in The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay, the Pulitzer Prize winning novel by the author of Wonder Boys. An epic novel, to be sure, at 656 pages in paperback, Kavalier and Clay recalls the literary equivalent of a Steven Spielberg movie: glossy, sprawling, sentimental in a saccharine and manipulative way, and hollow at the core. Cousins Joe Kavalier and Sammy Clay are budding geniuses in the also-budding world of comic books in the 1930's. Three-quarters of the narrative is spent on Joe and Sam's early years when they are both young, foolish, self-absorbed and self-pitying - and that is the book's greatest flaw. Five hundred-plus pages of sullen, brooding characters mired in guilt and shame and frustration is just much too much to expect the reader to bear, even if the reader knows that undoubtedly the characters will reap the disastrous product of the seeds they have sown. On the other hand, Chabon does a remarkable job of evoking the creative frustration of artists relegated to earning a living in a "mongrel art form" (the fabulous character of embittered pulp novelist George Deasey is a great vehicle for this). Having worked as a writer for another mongrel art form for nine years - "pseudonymous hackdom," in the words of George Deasey - I can personally attest to the fact that Chabon hit the nail squarely on the head, and for this my hat goes off to him, one writer to another. It is also for this reason -- my glowing respect for Chabon's lethal accuracy in portraying the frustration of artists trapped in literary ghettos -- that I refuse to dissect his disappointing novel any further, other than to say that I look forward to another work from this immensely talented novelist that is more focused and streamlined.
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