Roger Zelazny, on top of writing a number of immensely popular books and stories, was
one of the genre’s great stylists, noir minimalism utilized in nearly all his
works. He was likewise predictable for
his main characters; a world weary man with personal issues finds himself in
situations he would rather avoid but faces despite, the common premise. Basing his fiction on these two
same elements, I have come to think of Jon Courtenay Grimwood as a successor to
Zelazny, but significantly upgraded for the (post-) modern world.
An exemplary text, his End of the
World Blues (2006) possesses a sophisticated sense of noir that does not
lack for eye-kicks (to borrow a phrase from Bruce Sterling), and features a
troubled man whose choices get him in deeper and deeper trouble. The teenage girl manga fantasy, well, that's just the icing on the cake.
Where
Zelazny sought to implement history, myth, and legend into genre storylines,
Grimwood brings his foundational content closer to the contemporary era. Events do occur in and outside of time, but
always the rays of story emanate from 20 and 21st century concerns; identity,
existentialism, and an overall loss of faith in society inform the subtext. Never over-stating these elements, Grimwood
keeps his personal comments veiled, allowing the characters their voices, and
in turn gives his stories more socio-cultural relevancy than Zelazny’s. Embodying nearly everything the author has
created to date, End of the World Blues
is a well-written, engaging story worthy of greater recognition than it
received.
The novel
is the story of Kit Nouveau. A former
sniper in the Iraq War, he deserted after losing his marbles one day in combat,
killing people for reasons that remain unclear even to him. Living in Tokyo to escape court martial in
Ireland, his life has not gotten any better.
Proprietor of a seedy bar, drug abuser, and caught in a bizarre marriage
with a Japanese artist, his choices don’t make life any easier. Giving “English lessons” to a mob boss’s wife
the last straw, he encounters a hitman on a late night walk home. More surprising, the cosplay homeless girl he
gives coffee to most mornings is the one who steps in to save his life. The mystery of Lady Neku unraveling in the
aftermath, so too does Nouveau’s life in Japan, forcing him to confront the
demons he thought he’d left behind.
Guy Gavriel Kay is one of the great magicians of speculative fiction. Through sheer power of prose he is able to
transform what is a typical genre story into an experience that feels like something
more (even though it may not actually be).
Though writing in an entirely different style, Grimwood is able to
accomplish the same. The core plot of End of the World Blues is tried and
true: a man’s wife dies, and he must solve the mystery—a mystery which means
entering the world of organized crime without getting himself killed. In the hands of a lesser writer, such a story
has, and can be, rendered mundane, even boring.
But that Grimwood, like Kay, invests such an effort in presentation,
readers are likewise able to invest themselves in the story and are rewarded on
a word by word, phrase by phrase basis. Grimwood
is simply a superb stylist.
Slipping
quietly under the radar of American sci-fi fandom (yet wholly deserving of the
audience), Grimwood writes at-depth prose and plots his stories superbly if not
abstractly. Perhaps a writer’s writer,
the sentences of End of the World Blues
deftly describe scenes, jump to the heart of character through clipped thoughts
and feelings, and indirectly lead the reader on a journey of story that is both
close to home and larger than life, all in a paucity of words rooted in the
characters. William Gibson a stylist of
similar dimension, I would say Grimwood one ups the genre master for
profundity, veiled satire, and turn of phrase - “…time is an infinite number of
doors forever locking behind you.” (452) is a nice example.
In short, End of the World Blues is a mystery
novel whose orthodox storyline is rendered sublime by its cosmopolitan style
and light, satirical nihilism. Grimwood
penning a quality tale informed by post-modern political and identity issues,
the plot which plays out possesses all the elements of noir crime, yet rises above
for its inherent humanist coloring (The
Deer Hunter comes to mind as comparison from that aspect).
Lady Neku's fantasy cum reality of her personal history, while perhaps appropriating something from Japanese cosplay culture, remains such an additional point of imagination that it fully confirms the novel's singularity. (Readers who don't get her portion of the narrative, don't bite on Grimwood's presentation of it as reality, rather understand it is her imagined reality, and everything will flow smoothly.) Thus, it’s not precisely fair to say Grimwood is a modern upgrade of Zelazny,
yet the similarities between the two outnumber the differences, meaning readers
of one may enjoy the other. The other
obvious parallel is another writer of noir minimalism, William Gibson. The
near-future settings, the interest in Japan, the writing style, and the
attention to detail are strong parallels.
But where Gibson’s characters remain people viewed from a distance as
objects commenting on society, Grimwood’s are those the reader becomes involved
with, the commentary being more personal.
He thus comes recommended, particularly to US readers, as he is
deserving of a much wider audience.
I'll be checking this one out!
ReplyDeleteHope you enjoy!
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