Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Book Review: Caucasia, by Danzy Senna



This is part of the continuing series of random book reviews that'll be nothing like a New York Times book review. Gone is the ten thousand word analysis. Instead, here is a book review like you'd tell your friends.



The book: Danzy Senna's Caucasia.




So Senna writes her own life, fictionalizes 5% of it, adds an addicted retail/consumer/commodification tick to her writing style, all under the guise of racial identity in America--and it's mind-blowing to people.

Put another way, Caucasia's writing style is the illegitimate love child of an 8th grade poetry class and a Walmart commercial.

I've seen better symbolism and metaphorical imagery in the short stories of a 10 year old girl hopped-up on Beiber.










Man, I sound bitter up there, don't I? I mean, don't get me wrong--I hate the book. It somehow makes Cormac McCarthy look decisive by comparison. But my tone comes across a little rough, doesn't it? Do me a favor and read the review to yourself again in a chipper, upbeat tone. Now it sounds like I just hate the book--but with a certain delightfulness, right?




2 comments:

  1. An oddly toxic and reductive summary of a terrific coming of age story and a remarkably nuanced exploration of race and other fissures in America.

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  2. Toxic and reductive summaries...pretty much what I'm aiming for! Glad you understood the gist.

    And, nah. The story is as flimsy and thin as lace curtains, and as nuanced as a Dollar Dave's Bargain Bonanza commercial.

    To each their own. I appreciate your opinion nonetheless.

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