The New Face of Fiction
Novelists who are changing the way we see the world
November/December 1998
Jon Spayde Utne Reader
Faced with a veering, crazy-making, constantly fragmenting
contemporary world, a new breed of fiction writer is emerging.
What's remarkable about their work, which represents some of the
best novels and short stories being written today, is not only how
inventively it portrays the complex realities of life on the edge
of the 21st century, but also how gracefully it moves beyond the
literary trends of the recent past.
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A lot of mainstream American fiction in the 1980s was 'dirty
realism': trailer-park or tract-house tales littered with
references to cheesy consumer products, with condescension never
far away. Meanwhile, novels of gay awareness, Hispanic and Asian
American experience, and punked-out urban apocalypse highlighted
the themes of ethnic, social, and sexual identity. The towering
figure of Toni Morrison helped bring new depths of myth and history
to the distinguished tradition of African American writing.
The 10 writers featured here, first-time novelists as well as
veteran writers, each with a book published in 1998, have mastered
those advances and taken the art of storytelling into new territory
by altering and recombining them in fascinating ways. We selected
them after conversations with writers, editors, and other
discerning readers across the country. They're not the most famous
names on the fiction shelves, but they've all sparked the
enthusiasm of book people by the richness of their visions and the
bold ways they frame them. All of these writers shun the coziness
of the small and private perspective, the comforts of the ethnic or
social cocoon, in order to portray not just characters, but our
multifarious modern world itself, with its unpredictable mixtures
of perspectives, heritages, high and low cultures, inner and outer
realities. They paint big pictures, give context, make sense of the
world by refusing to make it simpler than it is.
COLSON WHITEHEAD
Colson Whitehead was a child growing up in New York when he
first felt the odd allure of elevator inspection records, 'those
little certificates under glass,'he explains, where the inspectors
leave their initials month after month.'The elevator inspector, he
says,'is a kind of secret hero in New York.'
Whitehead, 29, wrote television criticism for The Village
Voice after graduating from Harvard. He liked the new breed of
thoughtful, complex police shows like Homicide and the
British series Prime Suspect as well as the hip crime novels
of Walter Moseley and James Ellroy, and decided to try his hand at
a book about an elevator inspector-sleuth.'At first, I thought I'd
plunge the character into a situation that he knows nothing about.
But then I began to think more and more about the world of
elevators. Elevators began to bleed into other areas of my
thinking.'
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