From pulp-minded cynics there is the impression that
the literati like nothing more than a book which presents fractals of reality
impressed upon social and cultural situations—the more politically and historically
significant, the better. If you can
somehow throw in the values of literature (meta or otherwise), well, that’s
just ink for the Nobel. Post-modern the
name of the game, numerous are the works of serious literature (no quotes
needed) attempting to portray existence as ever deconstructing relativity for
critical acclaim. Speculative fiction a
genre not well known for its forays into this realm of literature, there have
been successful attempts, nevertheless.
Jorge Luis Borges, J.G. Ballard, M. John Harrison, Jeff VanderMeer,
Philip K. Dick (though perhaps unintentional) among them, adding his name to
this list is Lavie Tidhar, Osama (2012)
the novel securing his position.
Ostensibly, Osama
is the story of the private investigator Joe and the bizarre case he’s
contracted to take on. Living in
Ventiane, Laos, his only loves are cigarettes, whiskey, and the series of pulp
paperback novels he reads religiously called Osama Bin Laden: Vigilante. The main character Osama an anti-hero, the
books tell the story of bombings, destruction, and the overall machinations of
a man attempting to bring his version of justice to the Western world. A strange girl entering Joe’s office one day,
she asks him to track down the writer of the fictional antihero Osama, Mike Longshott. Though wanting to say no, the plastic with
unlimited credit handed his way serves to change Joe’s mind. Beginning his investigation into Longshott’s
whereabouts things quickly become strange: mysterious men in black suits shoot
at him for no reason. For poor Joe,
however, that’s not as strange as things become, particularly the closer he
gets to the reclusive writer.
Reading Osama
it quickly enough becomes apparent that Joe is living in a world that is not
ours—very similar, yes, but with key differences. The physics and cultures, travel and language
all work the same, but differences in character motivation, certain bits of
technology, the seeming randomness with which some events occur, and the fact
no acts of terrorism like we have witnessed the past three or four decades in
our world have occurred mark it as separate.
It is, in fact, the setting for a pulp novel. Osama
existing on two planes, Joe’s investigation in his world runs into limits and
barriers, and often enough penetrates to enter our world, though this in itself
is never unambiguous, events escalating steadily into the surreal. Spiderwebs of imagery inter- and
intra-connect the two worlds until the reader isn’t sure which is which. In a direction more and more equivocal as the
story progresses, Joe becomes an ant crawling on an M.C. Escher Moeibus strip.
Identifying the social and political concerns under
examination are the vignettes Tidhar satisfyingly grafts onto the
storyline. Taking two forms, the first
are excerpts from the fictional Osama
novels by Longshott which describe events from the terrorists’ point of
view. Juxtaposing the perspective is a
powerful chain of passages that describe the thoughts and experiences had by
unaware bystanders and passengers in the last moments before terrorist
attacks—the final passage having particularly strong impact. Woven tightly into the storyline, both sets
of vignettes effectively pin down the socio-political concerns, strengthening
the sub-text. That Joe appears to be a
victim of a real world (read: our world) terrorist attack only adds depth and
pertinence.
I sometimes pick up the Polish magazine of
speculative fiction Fantastyka my
wife reads. In a recent issue, Tidhar
was interviewed and had the following to say: "On one side I am fascinated by pulp fiction, and on the other
speculative fiction with ambition, so I write ambitious pulp fiction." Fuzzy,
disorienting, obtuse, whatever the word used to describe Joe’s experiences with
reality, it’s clear Tidhar is indeed playing literary games with genre in Osama.
It interrogates the strati of pulp fiction and mimetic reality against
the backdrop of the Bin Laden affair, trying to find a reality inherent to
both. The end relationship apparent, the
stories told by media and government are no less reliable than those told from
the terrorist’s side, giving rise to the idea the truth lies somewhere in the
middle, as indeed Joe’s experiences in and out of “reality” indicate. Kafka, Ballard, Harrison applauding on the
wings, the novel is, as Lidhar would hope, a work of fantasy with integrity.
In the end, Osama
is genre that boldly captures and parallels two perspectives on terrorism that
superficially seem anti-polar, yet upon quarter-turn reveal themselves to be
far less unequivocal. The only
complaint about the novel is the inconsistency in style. Christopher Priest
praises the novel, stating it’s “ambitious, skilled, and original”, but calls
Tidhar a “young” writer—a thought borne out by the occasionally imprecise prose,
not to mention the inability to imitate a true noir narrative. (Tidhar’s dialogue lacks true wit and the
worldview doesn’t quite have the degree of cutting cynicism one typically
associates with the mode.) All else that
is post-modern Tidhar nails. From the
effective entangling of perspectives to socio-political sub-text, real world
relevancy to the holistic vision imbued upon the plot structure, daringness to
examine a sensitive issue to the simultaneous usage and subversion of detective
noir, Osama is a novel which strikes
the right chords, from high-brow literature to genre classic. Unlike Jo Walton’s paean to genre Among Others, Osama is a more complex,
motivated novel, and instead falls into such company as Michael Chabon’s The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay and
Jeff Vandermeer’s Shriek. “Ambitious pulp,” indeed.
Great review:) I have finished "Osama" a few days ago and I agreed with your opinion. This book reminds me some of David Lynch movies.
ReplyDeleteCześć, Szymek! Glad you liked the review, and definitely agreed, Osama contains some twists on reality not unlike Lynch films.
DeleteHave you read any of Jeff VanderMeer's Ambergris books, for example City of Saints and Madmen, Shriek, or Finch? They are completely different in setting, character, etc., but likewise have that feel of a reality within a reality - something deeper and more surreal.
If you're interested in more on Osama, I would recommend listening to the podcast by The Writer and the Critic (link below). They go deeper into the novel and touch upon interesting points that I did not in my review.
http://writerandcritic.podbean.com/2012/09/22/episode-23-bitter-greens-and-osama/
I have "City of Saints and Madmen" on my bookshelf and, after I finish "Don Quixote" and "The Futurological Congress", I will be reading this VanderMeer book :)
DeletePodcast is really interesting, Tidhar create something unique with many interpretations.
I have a question. I see in review mention about Polish magazine "Fantastyka". Did your wife is Polish?:) I recommend you an your wife my blog, which is fresh and new and is, unfortunately, in Polish. Here is the link.
http://kalejdoskopwszechswiatow.blogspot.com/
I just read/listened to this book this weekend and loved it. It's been on my radar for a while, and when I saw in your index that you gave it 4 stars, I knew I had to check it out. Spot on review.
ReplyDeleteNow for the ultimate test... will I pass the blogspot IQ exam?...
What is the blogspot IQ exam?
ReplyDeleteIt's been a year since I read Osama, and it hasn't diminished itself in my mind. In the meantime, I have encountered more of Tidhar's work, particularly short fiction, and while I was very impressed with his re-working of the Che Guevara legend using a science fiction trope, I've been left flat by the other stories. Jamming pulp and 'literature' into the same basket is risky business that paid off with Osama but less so with the shorts...
Given what I see, I'm very afraid Osama is a one-off, an accidental success. Christopher Priest's review of The Violent Century does not inspire, and from what I see of A Man Lies Dreaming it looks exactly like Norman Spinrad's The Iron Dream. But of course, I need to read to find out...
Hmm, maybe blogspot got rid of the IQ exam. There are times when I try to comment on your blog, or the blogs of other blogspot residents, and blogspot quizzes me on pictures of sandwiches or beverages or something. I sometimes fail (often because I'm using my phone and it won't let me scroll down to see all of the images) and I'm denied entry. Basically gave up commenting on blogspot because of it.
ReplyDeleteAfter reading this, I did wonder if the noir/pulp/comic playfulness was Tidhar's only M.O. What I've read of THE VIOLENT CENTURY and A MAN LIES DREAMING sounds awfully similar in structure.
As far as Priest's reviews go, I find them fascinating, informative reads, but they never influence me much. I think I remember his most shocking criticism of THE VIOLENT CENTURY had to do with a particular adjective Tidhar used to describe smoke... which I happened to like. That review, plus Priest's love letter to Station Eleven has pretty much put him in my "Old dude who loves literary, character-driven SF at the expense of originality or linguistic flexibility." I'm more tolerant of word play and less tolerant of "characters who do stuff in familiar settings." (And I really did love the character stuff in Station Eleven, but excellent SF requires more.)
I did love Inverted World, and based on what you've reviewed of Priest's, I'll probably love his other fiction, too. And I do enjoy his crotchety reviews, but he doesn't influence my reading list.
Ohhh, that exam. :) Yeah, it's about time to do away with the hurdle and let Google's superior spam filter take care of unwanted comments, all else to be moderated by the owner.
DeleteI recall with humor Priest's hangup on Tidhar's use of adjectives. But I think there is more in his review. If I remember correctly, his strongest criticism is of Tidhar's inability to make 'superheroes' more than they historically have been, despite that Tidhar was attempting (let me flick lint off my sleeve and light my pipe) something more serious. In other words, if Priest can be believed, Tidhar had a political agenda for his superheroes that fell flat. Justin Landon (one of my whipping boys) fell for the ploy, but given how little attention the novel received elsewhere, it seems not many others did.
So, regarding the MO, I hadn't thought about it, but you may have a point. It seems Tidhar peruses the dramatic (but less controversial) moments of history and attempts to inject pulpiness into them to arrive at some sort of political agenda.
Station Eleven, what's that? :) I guess it's time I forked out the cash and joined the informed side of the discussion...