Jonathan Lethem and the Galaxy of Writing
By (Author) Dr Joseph Brooker
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
17th June 2021
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers
Structuralism and Post-structuralism
813.6
Paperback
224
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
327g
Author of Motherless Brooklyn and The Fortress of Solitude, Jonathan Lethem is one of the most celebrated and significant American writers working today. This new scholarly study draws on a deep knowledge of all Lethems work to explore the range of his writing, from his award-winning fiction to his work in comics and criticism. Reading Lethem in relation to five themes crucial to his work, Joseph Brooker considers influence and intertextuality; the role of genres such as crime, science fiction and the Western; the imaginative production of worlds; superheroes and comic book traditions; and the representation of New York City. Close readings of Lethems fiction are contextualized by reference to broader conceptual and comparative frames, as well as to Lethems own voluminous non-fictional writing and his adaptation of precursors from Franz Kafka to Raymond Chandler. Rich in critical insight, Jonathan Lethem and the Galaxy of Writing demonstrates how an understanding of this author illuminates contemporary literature and culture at large.
Joseph Brookers Jonathan Lethem and the Galaxy of Writing is an important new addition to the growing bookshelf of excellent scholarship devoted to Lethems voluminous output. Wrestling Lethems work free of the problematic label, postmodernism, Brooker eschews the misleadingly tidy safety of chronological order, and instead deftly shuffles Lethems fiction under a sequence of key rubrics, to meticulously analyse the spectrum of his concerns, from the complexities of world making to the pathos of the superheroes confrontation with the indignities of mundane reality. Attuned to both Lethems place amongst his contemporaries (Egan, Franzen, Wallace), and his skilful borrowings from the past (from DeLillo and Dick to The Trashmen), this is a compelling and comprehensive analysis of a major writer. * Stephen J. Burn, Reader in American Literature after 1945, School of Critical Studies, University of Glasgow *
Joseph Brooker is Reader in Modern Literature at Birkbeck, University of London, UK. His previous books include Joyce's Critics (2004), Flann O'Brien (2005) and Literature of the 1980s (2010).