ITL Baseball

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Tuesday, 26 November 2013

Alaska Schmalaska

Posted on 05:01 by blogger
with the Coen brothers' new film Inside Llewyn Davies finally being released next week I'd thought I'd reblog this post about what possibly could be their next film...(or possibly the one after that)
...


The Yiddish Policemen's Union by Michael ChabonIn Michael Chabon’s universe Alaska isn’t a frontier bastion for singsongy dimwitted governors and moose-killing survivalists but rather is the transplanted home for two million cosmopolitan Jewish refugees crammed into the sprawling city of Sitka just south of Juneau in the Alaskan panhandle. This is the central conceit of Chabon’s THE YIDDISH POLICEMEN’S UNION, a murder mystery and alternative history noir, that follows Detective Mayer Landsman’s quest to find the person or persons who killed the quiet chess master who lived in his overcrowded flop house. In what used to be called ‘the Jonbar Hinge’ among us sci-fi geeks, the moment Chabon’s Earth diverged from ours was sometime in the late 1930s, when the US government allowed unlimited Jewish migration from a Hitler dominated Europe to refugee camps in Alaska. The book is a kind of a ghost story, imaging the unlived lives of hundreds of thousands of people who, in the real world, were murdered by the Nazis. Chabon’s fantasy is that instead of this vibrant, rich, literary Yiddish culture becoming extinct in 1945, it crossed the Atlantic and survived in America. That’s the premise but what of the book? In many ways it’s a standard police procedural of the Ed McBain / Mickey Spillane school that Chabon has composed in an affectionate pulp 1940’s style. He writes in the urgent present tense with a great deal of panache and economy. Chabon’s metaphors aren’t quite as rich as Raymond Chandler’s (whose are?) and his steeliness isn’t up there with Hammett, but his jokes are as good and sometimes better. His humour is Yiddish humour. Dry, slightly surreal, dark. There’s a gag or Chandlerism every few pages: ‘She took a compliment the way some people take a can of soda that they suspect you’ve shaken first.’ The plot takes a while to get going but that’s ok, as you want to get to grips with Chabon’s Alaska, the alternate time-line and the offbeat characters. When the murder mystery does start to unfold, Chabon spins the yarn with intelligence, style and tight plotting. Alternative History novels are en vogue and a different outcome for World War II is by far the most popular scenario. Philip Roth’s THE PLOT AGAINST AMERICA covered similar terrain only three years ago and we’ve also had FATHERLAND, SS GB among many recent others. Chabon himself is a fan of Philip K Dick’s AH novel THE MAN IN THE HIGH CASTLE, which towers above all contenders in the ‘Nazis win the war’ field. So although Chabon isn’t quite off in terra nova, what really stuck with me was the idea that every single person in Sitka – the former capital of Russian America (now there’s an idea for an AH novel) – was speaking Yiddish. There’s Yiddish TV, newspapers, radio, songs. Even the Irish newspaper hack talks a kind of low German. I liked this notion because although now virtually extinct as a literary tongue, Yiddish produced an extraordinary corpus of poems, plays and novels in its brief flowering, and today its influence can be felt in everything from Woody Allen films to Mel Brooks and Curb Your Enthusiasm. Irony is the default stance of Yiddish prose. Irony, embedded with black witticisms and a kind of grim fatalism. I have read a critique that Chabon’s style is ‘not Yiddish enough’ and certainly compared with Nobel Prize winner’s IB Singer’s it seems mannered and even a little forced. But actually Chabon does have a precursor in the lesser known Yiddish master Lamed Shapiro, whose American stories were influenced by the US hard-boiled school and seem strikingly similar to Chabon’s mix of paranoia, violence and defiant logic-inverting humour.

TYPU is a thoughtful, introspective, novel - my only real existential criticism is that I don’t think the AH scenario really adds that much to the narrative and I wonder if the novel might not have worked just as well in our universe. Chabon said that the AH was necessary because ‘the Yiddish world is dead’, and while it is true that the Nazis destroyed Yiddish Europe (and the survivors mostly migrated to Israel where they had to speak Hebrew), Yiddish did not die out completely. My own wedding ceremony was in Yiddish at a Yiddish-Bundist commune in Putnam Valley, New York, and anyone who’s been to Kiryas Joel, NY, will find an entire town of 20,000 Haredi Jews with Yiddish newspapers, Yiddish street signs, Yiddish coffee shops, Yiddish schools, self published Yiddish spy novels. And yes, Kiryas Joel even has Yiddish speaking policemen.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in coen brothers, declan burke, kiryas joel, lamed shapiro, michael chabon, the yiddish policemen's union, woody allen, yiddish | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Hikikomori, JG Ballard, Oblomov And The Deep Map
    Have you ever heard of the Hikikomori? They are a subculture of young Japanese men who refuse to leave their bedroom. This is from the BBC s...
  • The Most Interesting Man In The World's Final Journey
    My review of Patrick Leigh Fermor's The Broken Road from yesterday's Sydney Morning Herald and Melbourne Age . ... In 1933 Patrick...
  • Philosophy and Dr Who
    In the 50th anniversary special of Dr Who, The Day of the Doctor, there was a very intriguing philosophical moment that I thought might be i...
  • The Songs of Molly Drake
    In the 1970's the most important member of the Drake family to me was Gabrielle Drake who was one of the stars of the cult Gerry Anderso...
  • In The Morning I'll Be Gone - The First Review
    The first review of In The Morning I'll Be Gone came in last week. It's from Jon Page of Bite The Book and here it is (below). Rem...
  • I Hear The Sirens
    Sue Turnbull's review of I Hear The Sirens In The Street from last weekend's Sydney Morning Herald and Melbourne Age. I pledge my u...
  • Funny Ha Ha
    The other day a friend asked me to recommend some funny books to him because he was "feeling a bit down". I told him that it was p...
  • How To Read Thomas Pynchon
    I just started reading the most recent Thomas Pynchon novel Bleeding Edge last night. Its pretty good so far and I'll try and get a ful...
  • Borgen Is Back
    Ok, so it also helps that the Prime Minister, er, appeals to men of a certain age... Season 2 of Borgen started on Wednesday night here in A...
  • A Walk Up Mount Coot-tha
    At the Brisbane Writer's Festival yesterday I had a free morning and afternoon so on the advice of Trip Advisor I decided to hike to the...

Categories

  • .the big lebowski
  • 10 greatest rock memoirs
  • 2013
  • a journey
  • a matter of life and death
  • a supposedly fun thing I'll never do again
  • a time of gifts
  • accents
  • Adelaide Writers Festival
  • Adrian McKinty
  • Alasdair MacIntyre
  • Alicia Stallings
  • american splendor
  • Aranaldur Indridason
  • Atlantic Civilization
  • australia
  • autobiography
  • backstroke
  • barack obama
  • Barry Cunliffe
  • BBC
  • belfast
  • Belfast Poet Laureate
  • Belfast Riots
  • ben wheatley
  • bjork
  • bleeding edge
  • Blue Highways
  • Borgen
  • breaking bad
  • brienne
  • Bruce Chatwin
  • carrickfergus
  • chad harbach
  • Charles Sprawson
  • Charles Willeford
  • cheers and boos
  • cheesy
  • China Mieville
  • christopher nolan
  • coen brothers
  • colin harrison
  • colum mccann
  • Connie Wilson
  • cormac mccarthy
  • crap
  • crash
  • creep
  • dan brown
  • Dan Stone
  • Dana King
  • Daniel Dennett
  • dashiell hammett
  • david foster wallace
  • david logan
  • David Lynch
  • david peace
  • declan burke
  • Denmark
  • derry
  • DNA
  • Douglas Hofstadter
  • down in the ground
  • Downton Abbey
  • Dr Who
  • duel
  • Edgelands
  • Edward Thomas
  • elanor catton
  • Elmore Leonard
  • Elysium
  • Expedition to the Barrier Peaks
  • faber and faber
  • Falling Glass
  • first review
  • FX
  • Gabrielle Drake
  • Game of Thrones
  • Gene Wolfe
  • george orwell
  • gravity's rainbow
  • Halldor Laxness
  • harvey pekar
  • haunts of the black masseur
  • homeland
  • I Am A Strange Loop
  • I hear the sirens in the street
  • ian rankin
  • iceland
  • in the morning I'll be gone
  • independence
  • Inferno
  • inherent vice
  • interactive murder map
  • ireland
  • Irish
  • Israeli Flags
  • Jack Batten
  • jack vance
  • jaime lannister
  • JD salinger
  • Jerusalem
  • Jez Butterworth
  • jg ballard
  • JK rowling
  • Jo Baker
  • joe queenan
  • john mcfetridge
  • John Murray
  • John Rawls
  • John Searle
  • Jonathan Lethem
  • jonathan swift
  • Kill List
  • Kirk
  • kiryas joel
  • lamed shapiro
  • law and order
  • Liverpool FC
  • locked room mystery
  • locked room problem
  • London Orbital
  • long list
  • Lost In Space
  • louis macneice
  • M and G diner
  • matt damon
  • Melbourne Age
  • memoir
  • Miami Blues. Penguin Crime Classics
  • michael chabon
  • Michael Sandel
  • Michael Symmons Roberts
  • millers crossing
  • Molly Drake
  • Morrissey
  • Motherless Brooklyn
  • murder ballads
  • murdering twinmaker
  • nadir
  • Neill Blomkamp
  • Nerd of Noir
  • new york times
  • nicholas bouvier
  • Nick Drake
  • nyrb
  • obvious parody
  • of monsters and men
  • oxford parks
  • patrice oneal
  • Patrick Fermor
  • patrick leigh fermor
  • Paul Farley
  • penguin
  • philip larkin
  • PrairyErth
  • Radio Silence
  • radiohead
  • raymond chandler
  • red hall
  • Red or Dead
  • red rocks
  • review
  • Richard Cowper
  • Richard Curtis
  • River Horse
  • Robert Galbraith
  • Robert Macfarlane
  • Robert Nozick
  • rules of writing
  • Sawston
  • SBS
  • scotland
  • screenplay
  • sightseers
  • sigur ros
  • sinead morrissey
  • soap opera
  • Spain
  • Spinetingler
  • spinetingler award
  • star trek
  • Stephen Donaldson
  • stephen oppenheimer
  • Steven Dougherty
  • tasmania
  • terry pratchett
  • the 47 ronin
  • the americans
  • the australian
  • The booker prize
  • The Broken Road
  • The City And The City
  • The Clash
  • the coen brothers
  • The Cold Cold Ground
  • The Counselor
  • The Cuckoos Calling
  • the dude
  • the dying earth
  • The Fortress of Solitude
  • the greatest westerns
  • the handsome family
  • The Icknield Way
  • The Mind's I
  • The Ned Kelly Awards
  • the new york yankees
  • The Old Ways
  • The Original Position
  • the pittsburgh pirates
  • The Shetland Islands
  • the st kilda sea baths
  • the sugar cubes
  • the swimmer as hero
  • The Toronto Star
  • The Undertones
  • The Unlimited Dream Company
  • The Wall Street Journal
  • the way of the world
  • the yiddish policemen's union
  • thomas covenant
  • thomas pynchon
  • tokyo
  • Tony blair
  • TransAtlantic
  • transporter
  • trolling
  • uncool baseball teams
  • university of minnesota
  • v
  • vineland
  • wanker
  • werner herzog
  • WH Davies
  • William Least Heat Moon
  • woody allen
  • WW2 novel
  • yiddish

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (100)
    • ►  December (10)
    • ▼  November (10)
      • Philosophy and Dr Who
      • Alaska Schmalaska
      • In The Morning I'll Be Gone - The First Review
      • Literary Geography
      • Why Dr Who Matters
      • Autobiography - Morrissey
      • Borgen Is Back
      • The Fix Is In
      • Books Of The Year - November Update
      • Morrissey On Lost In Space
    • ►  October (12)
    • ►  September (10)
    • ►  August (12)
    • ►  July (11)
    • ►  June (10)
    • ►  May (11)
    • ►  April (10)
    • ►  March (4)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

blogger
View my complete profile