Saturday, November 22, 2008

The Brief Wonderous Life of Oscar Wao ****

2007 335 pages
By Junot Diaz
Published by Riverhead Books / Penguin Books

This is a book by a Latin American author (Dominican), and it is typical of most books made by Latino authors - NOT! Guys like Luis Borges, Carlos Fuentes and Juan Rulfo do not start their books with a quote from Stan Lee's of Marvel Comics the Fantastic Four. No they Don't! So this is a completely different species were talking about.

Yet the book was gripping all the way through. It had pop culture, (more on that later), poetry, drama, history and it had lots of humor. All of it interweaves in a seamless manner, moving from the urbane to the profound with out skipping a beat.

So Oscar Wao is a Dominican living in New Jersey in the inner city. He's a complete nerd. He's very smart, but he's fat and does not fit in. He does all the nerdy stuff. Reads comic books (hence the quote from the Fantastic Four), plays at role playing games and attempts to write some of his own fantasy stories. He's not your typical Dominican, especially since he has no luck with the ladies (you see all Dominican men are lady killers.) It wouldn't be so bad if he didn't care that much about the ladies, but he is obsessed with them. Of course their affections are not returned. A few break his heart by entering into the friends zone with him, which drives him even more batty.

Funny enough, less than half the book actually deals with him. In the middle two thirds, the book is about his family and ancestors and their times in the Dominican Republic. It delves into detail about Trujillo's reign of terror. Tragic things happen to his family and ancestors. This is all part of the Fuku (The New World Curse) which his family seems to be saddled with. This is all set up for the beautiful and intensely tragic ending that befalls Oscar (no spoiler here - remember the title is a "Brief Wonderous Life...)

The book has these very interesting footnotes, which are asides from the main story and give lots of history about The Dominican Republic and Trujillo. Interestingly enough, these same footnotes also give background information on the characters, who are of course fictional. It makes the characters seem real while at the same time, adding to the narrative. The footnotes are nice, because they give vital information about the history without disrupting the flow of the story. These footnotes are very curious indeed. They are part of what makes this book so fascinating.

And then there are all the pop culture references due to Oscar's interest in these things. The thing is the culture is not mainstream culture, but references to hipper, cooler geekdom. I related to some of these references, because I was and still am interested in these things. Oscar's interests are comic book authors, Daniel Clowes and the Hernandez Brothers. The author himself quotes Marvel Comics' character The Watcher for his more cerebral and ominous moments. The kids, Oscar and his sister Lola, grow up in the eighties so there are lots of music references. They mention Siouxie and the Banshees and Joy Division.

The language may be an issue for some people. It certainly was for some people in our group. The characters live in the inner city and the main narrator is one of the characters in the story (instead of the typical god-like, faceless narrator) so he uses some raw language.

I very rarely rate a book 4 stars, but this story is so fresh and so well told, and so powerful. It's the first thing I've rated this way for probably over a year.