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Geek Chic

By Evelyn McDonnell/MOLI

Two of '07's most acclaimed novels plumb from comic pulp

Oscar Wao and Newell Ewing are comic-book fanatics. Both outsider youths have bodacious moms and superhero complexes. Wao is an obese Dominican in Paterson, New Jersey, who's seemingly stuck in a perennial virginal pubescence. Ewing is an actually pubescent WASP denizen of suburban Las Vegas. Both nerds are ‘07 literary heroes: Wao is the titular protagonist of Junot Diaz's first novel, The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, while Ewing is the missing child at the center of Charles Bock's debut novel, Beautiful Children.

Both books were released, the former by Penguin, the latter by Random House, to an envious amount of hype (envied by this writer, at least). Wao, the successor to Diaz's acclaimed 1997 collection of short stories Drown, was years in the making and wound up winning a Pulitzer. Bock's book, also a long-term labor of love, earned him a front-page review in The New York Times Book Review – and a MOLI book of the month pick – though it doesn't seem to have lived up to its initial hype with sales or prolonged fanfare.

Diaz and Bock are both products of literary schools: Diaz teaches at MIT (and compares a gruesome bit of torture to a MLA seminar in one stretching-it passage in Wao) while Bock has talked about the years he spent workshopping Beautiful Children under the tutelage of masters like David Foster Wallace. Both books can be self-consciously writerly. Wao breaks free of its footnotes and rotating narrative voices, while Children gets bogged down. Both represent a triumph, and moral denouement, for geek chic.

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What People Are Saying…

Leave a Comment

  • jfury

    10:26 EDT, 16.May.08

    Hah, my dad grew up fat and poor and Arab in Paterson. Someone give the man a book deal.

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