Oliver, our youngest fan, with his Pete the Cat doll. Both are too cool for this blog.
According to the nifty internet holiday calendar that Gianna emailed to me, today is auspicious. Sure, there's National Day of Prayer; that's fine. Also, today is National Two Different Colored Shoes Day, but I don't think I could post an entire piece about Pete the Cat. I like Pete, but let's be honest...he's a bit juvenile. Therefore we're going with Paranormal Day, and I'll spare you the wisecracks about the irony of the paranormal and the praying on the same day.
Gods Without Men. The latest book from super-talented Hari Kunzru is a revelation, a declaration of great literary promise arriving on the scene full force. Fans of David Mitchell or Adam Johnson's acclaimed The Orphan Master's Son (which I declared the best book of the year back in January because I'm ballsy like that) must read Gods Without Men as well.
Hari Kunzru
Kunzru, like David Mitchell with CloudAtlas, manages to blend several stories into a single, powerful narrative of time and place. Gods Without Men follows the story of a family in crisis, a mother and father at odds with each other, a relationship strained by the birth and years of raising a severely autistic son. Desperate, they head West on vacation and hope that the change of scenery will provide respite. While walking through Joshua Tree National Park, the couple suddenly realizes their son is no longer by their sides. Call the National Guard. Add to this the Native American coyote legends with a decidedly modern--coyote makes meth--twist. Ooh, and then there's a 60's hippie cult preparing for the aliens. (See? I am loosely connecting this stuff to Paranormal Day.) Leaving San Francisco to live life more fully, a young woman joins the group heading for Joshua Tree to prepare for the UFOs. All of the stories, and a sense of the freedom and wildness of the American West, mesh into a compelling narrative. And Hari Kunzru has serious literary chops. The guy can write.
I think Gianna might be an alien. She freaks me out.
I'm calling it now--The Orphan Master's Son is the best book of 2012. Sure, we're only nine days into the new year, but you're going to have to take my word on this declaration. I haven't loved a book this much in about five years, and Adam Johnson's new novel now ranks among my favorite books ever. It really is that spectacular.
The DMZ (above ground)
The Orphan Master's Son is set in North Korea, a location that is so foreign that it itself becomes the dominant player in this story of resilience and adversity. I happened to be finishing OMS on the night that the news announced Kim Jong Il's death, and the experience of watching the North Korean people mourn their Dear Leader with this book fresh in my mind was a bit uncanny. The book makes clear how the North Korean people are trained from infancy to value the state over self, and the Dear Leader is the state. The wailing mourners make sense in this context; their entire world was unhinged with Kim Jong Il's death. It's a fascinating subject and location.
The Dear Leader
What's the story, though? Jun Do is, as the title suggests, the son of the orphan master. His mother, vanished, was a singer. Because he grows up among the orphans, though, everyone assumes that he too is an orphan. He is put to work doing the jobs that orphans are given, the lowliest tasks in the country. Eventually Jun Do is trained as a soldier and sent to patrol the pitch black tunnels running under the DMZ and over to South Korea. He learns to fight without seeing. From there, Jun Do is recruited to become a professional kidnapper, stealing unlucky citizens from Japan. He accomplishes his missions, but he also glimpses the world outside of North Korea, where the electricity doesn't shut off in the evenings, where people are free to talk and play and go where they please. Jun Do, though, returns to his homeland.
Koreans mourning Kim Jong Il's death
He works as an intelligence officer on a fishing vessel. He travels to Texas as part of a delegation meeting with a Senator. He suffers in a forced labor camp. And Jun Do, the ultimate John Doe character, transforms himself into a completely different person and finds his way into Kim Jong Il's inner circle.
Author Adam Johnson
The Orphan Master's Son is a thriller, an epic adventure story, a cultural critique, a love story, a story of hope and transformation. It is remarkable for its vibrant characters and plot, but it's also a literary book. This is a book into which you can happily lose yourself for a week, and about which you'll think for weeks afterward. Adam Johnson has written something brilliant. The Orphan Master's Son is one of those books where readers band together to share their love. I can't wait for everyone to read this book, and luckily it goes on sale tomorrow, Tuesday, January 10th.