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Lovecraft Country

3.7(57)
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About the book

Now an HBO® series from J.J. Abrams
(executive producer of Westworld), Misha Green (creator of Underground),
and Jordan Peele (director of Get Out and Us), this brilliant and
imaginative novel by critically acclaimed author Matt Ruff makes visceral the
terrors of Jim Crow America, melding historical fiction, pulp noir, and
Lovecraftian horror.Chicago, 1954. When his father Montrose goes missing, 22-year-old Army veteran Atticus Turner embarks on a road trip to New England to find him, accompanied by his Uncle George—publisher of The Safe Negro Travel Guide—and his childhood friend Letitia. On their journey to the manor of Mr. Braithwhite—heir to the estate that owned one of Atticus’s ancestors—they encounter both mundane terrors of white America and malevolent spirits that seem straight out of the weird tales George devours.A chimerical blend of magic, power, hope, and freedom that stretches across time, touching diverse members of two black families, Lovecraft Country is a devastating kaleidoscopic portrait of racism—the terrifying specter that continues to haunt us today.

Editions (3)

ISBN9780063412958
PublisherHarper Collins Publ. USA
Publication Date08/27/24
Pages400

Reviews & Ratings

57 ratings

5 reviews

3.7

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  • auntieterror
    auntieterror

    43 Followers

    4.0

    There are many things that took me by surprise with this book, first and foremost: the style of story-telling. I had expected a classical novel with a more or less (after all, this is meant to be "Lovecraftian") straight line towards a catastrophe. What I read was a collection of Lovecraft-inspired short stories which supplied little dots you could connect to form a central story. Some of these stories played out longer and in more (unimportant) detail than would have been necessary, I feel. Also, the writing was a lot more humourous than I anticipated - which wasn't a bad thing, only an unexpected element to the mix of Lovecraftian elements and racism criticism. There are, as I have mentioned, Lovecraft elements such as doors between worlds across the universe, shapeless horrors haunting the shadows and covens of (elderly) white men trying to summon powers they don't seem to fully understand. But they don't supply the horrid and terrifying bits - that is wholly achieved by the disgusting racism the group of main chacarters encounters at every turn in a not so distant past in the US. Jim Crow definitely beats old Shoggoth in horror and ugliness here. This book being set in the rural South of the US in the 1950s offers ways to show the effects of racism that wouldn't be plausible if the story was set in a contemporary US. While racism is still a problem there today (as in the whole world, actually and sadly), the discrimination against and segregation of people of colour in general and black people in particular is no longer written down as official state law. While people of colour still have to worry a lot more about being pulled over by cops than white people, at least the cop can no longer pull them over legally on the grounds of their skin colour and the time of day (or night, as happens to the characters in the book). Of course, the racism shown in the book reflects back on the reality of today, but the exact way racism influences Ruff's story development in his setting of the 1950s wouldn't be credible today. He'd have to tell certain aspects differently, in the same way an author telling a story the development of which is influenced by the presence of antisemitism in Germany would have to present incidents of antisemitism differently, depending on whether they set the story in contemporary Germany, 1930s Germany or medieval Germany. Antisemitism was there, sadly, in all these time periods - but the outward form it was legally allowed to take would differ greatly. By presenting the incidents of racism as he does, Ruff enables the reader to draw the obvious conclusion that racism is absolutely wrong, and also stupid. What annoyed me at times was the schoolmasterly tone employed on top of that: "And this, kids, is why racism is bad." This just isn't necessary and might even hurt the valid point he's making because people in general are a lot less likely to consider a proposition or opinion as correct if the person presenting it gives them the feeling they think the audience is just too stupid to get it if it isn't spelt for them letter by letter. Neither Colson Whitehead in [b:The Underground Railroad|30555488|The Underground Railroad|Colson Whitehead|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1493178362l/30555488._SX50_.jpg|48287641] nor Jodi Picoult in [b:Small Great Things|41021501|Small Great Things|Jodi Picoult|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1533135682l/41021501._SX50_.jpg|45950662] felt the need to spell it out for their readers, and still I can't imagine anyone with even half a braincell to read the first and think "awww, the good old times in the US South" or to read the second and think "yes, of course it's right to drag that nurse to court, I wish she'd been found guilty". Both authors show instead of telling, and trust their readers to be enough of a human being to still get it. Still, the book is a good and surprisingly fun read despite the serious issue of racism underlying the whole plot.

    Nov 8, 2022

  • katjavonderburg
    katjavonderburg

    2 Followers

    5.0

    Matt Ruff geht immer und auch sein neuestes Buch ist fantastisch. Eine Lovecraft'sche Fantasy-Story in den rassistischen USA der 50er Jahre - was soll da schiefgehen?!

    Jun 1, 2024

  • miss_mandrake
    miss_mandrake

    290 Followers

    4.0

    Schräges Buch mit Unterhaltungswert aber ohne tiefen Sinn oder Plan. Politisch und definitiv eine Art von Kult. Freu mich auf die Serie

    Oct 18, 2022

3 of 5 reviews

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