Tournament of Books discussion
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2016 Tournament of Books
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The New World, by Chris Adrian and Eli Horowitz
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I'm part of the way through, and while it seems like exactly the sort of book that would appeal to me, it's not really clicking. I want to tell the book, "it's not you, it's me."
I just finished this today, and I agree the first half was more satisfying than the second. It felt muddied to me and I found myself annoyed with the way it ended. Like the authors gave up a bit.

Then at some point it became fairly standard chick lit, story of a marriage with its good points and its bad points. I didn't enjoy that part as much, though it wasn't awful (for me I think it suffered by comparison to Fates & Furies, which I just finished). Was there a plot-driven reason why the book changed? I felt like I missed something about how the Polaris plotline resolved.
And that ending was one of the most horribly frustrating things I've ever seen in a book. I could hardly believe any publisher actually let them get away with that. 23 Kindle pages of it!!
I actually liked the second half more than the first. The first part reminded me of Atwood's The Heart Goes Last. There's something about the sci-fi parody aspect that I don't really enjoy. Jane and Jim's relationship was the heart of the story, so I felt like the first part was just teasing us until we could actually get to that story.
Mainon wrote: "And that ending was one of the most horribly frustrating things I've ever seen in a book. I could hardly believe any publisher actually let them get away with that. 23 Kindle pages of it!! "
That's apparently only in the digital version. The hardcopy I read only had a paragraph.
More effective, I think, would be if the ending were generated on the fly in the digital version, so that you could click forever and it would continue to go on and on.
Mainon wrote: "And that ending was one of the most horribly frustrating things I've ever seen in a book. I could hardly believe any publisher actually let them get away with that. 23 Kindle pages of it!! "
That's apparently only in the digital version. The hardcopy I read only had a paragraph.
More effective, I think, would be if the ending were generated on the fly in the digital version, so that you could click forever and it would continue to go on and on.

By the time we got to the pointy end of the pyramid it was digital drivel. Ohh! How clever! What an interesting way to finish! Hogwash! It was indulgent gimmickry! (And that is the Kindle version without the coloured tabs and forward/backward swipes of the digital version)
The novel started out with such promise as futuristic genre writing. Its chapters changed in point of view and place in time. It was an interesting take on cryogenics and grief and love. But then it started to wallow ... and wallow ... and wallo ... and wall ... and (ok, you get the idea!).
It could have been a great short story rather than a novella (it was only 150 odd pages ... shorter actually if you don't count the rubbish at the end). Instead it became a Cheshire Cat, leaving you with nothing but a smug grin.

For a story about memory, there isn't a whole lot to take along beyond the last page. Not enough science to be sci-fi, not nearly enough good writing to be lit.
I would characterize it as a novella that should have been edited down to a short story with a bit more development to add a bit of punch. it was definitely missing punch.
I always applaud the Tournament staff for including fringe works in the dance, but i think they misfired with this one.


By the time we got to the pointy end of the pyramid it was digital drivel. Ohh! How clever! What an interesting way to finish! Hogwash! It was indulgent gimmickry! ..."
Indulgent gimmickry is a perfect description.
Ohenry, I think I agree with you too--I might have really liked this as a short story.






I'm reminded of Ubik as well during the Jim parts; Interesting concept, meh execution. Possibly inspiring something greater in future writing.


Hmmm...not sure how I feel about this one. I feel like I missed a chapter or two. Does that make sense? For example, what happened to Jane in Brian's office with Poppy? He grew a beard for her? What was the test? To see if she was worth freezing? Did Jim have to go through the same process? Obviously not, but then why make her jump through so many hoops? So they just let her go after abducting a lawyer and his wife? Or at least made them disappear? But why? I'm so confused!!!
Julie wrote: "Disappeared up its own oriface
By the time we got to the pointy end of the pyramid it was digital drivel. Ohh! How clever! What an interesting way to finish! Hogwash! It was indulgent gimmickry! ..."
Wow, what a gift you have with words, Julie! That was a wonderfully snarky and descriptive review, and you confirmed that I was right to skip this one. Thanks!
By the time we got to the pointy end of the pyramid it was digital drivel. Ohh! How clever! What an interesting way to finish! Hogwash! It was indulgent gimmickry! ..."
Wow, what a gift you have with words, Julie! That was a wonderfully snarky and descriptive review, and you confirmed that I was right to skip this one. Thanks!


Given that first-round upsets are common and ALL has a ton of haters. I could see Choire Sicha shooting it down in favor of The New World. Which I just finished and kind of liked. It definitely felt disjointed, and like @Dustin, I am confused over various plot points. I figure a second reading could clear up some of them but don't want to take the time. However, I did like it as a meditation on married love. JMHO.

Surreal, unsettling, puzzled yet curious are the words that came to mind when I finished this book.
The blurb sounded like this was just my type of book as I enjoy reading stories with a sci-fi futuristic element to them.
I will admit not knowing much cryogenics and what the current thoughts/projects are but was curious to see how it was handled in this book.
I liked how it was alternating chapters/narrators of Jane in the present, and Jim in the future that told their stories to their situation and relationship.
I was more engaged in the first half of the book and had already formed my opinions on Jane and Jim but then the storyline concentrated more on the relationship/marriage complexities which shaded by previous opinion regarding their relationship. I thought the transition between parts was not as smooth as it could be and felt jarring at times and I thought okay this is what it concentrating on now. By the end of the book the flaws/faults in the couple’s relationship are revealed and the introspection seems to have let the sci-fi vibe falter as well.
Overall this was a quick pleasant read for me but I was left not sure who the intended audience should be for this book.
This is the 3rd TOB I have read (not counting the books that I had previously read before the final TOB list was revealed).
But I will say that I liked it better than The Invaders and A Spool of Blue Thread.


I think the absence of after 'death' narrative is intentional. Jim is an atheist and doesn't believe in anything after death but seems to come to a conclusion that he is supposed to be dead together with his wife to honor their time together. It remains up to the reader to decide if something happens to the both of them afterwards. Super frustrating but would be cheating to have a narrative that tells us what happens afterwards don't you think?
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Books mentioned in this topic
The Invaders (other topics)A Spool of Blue Thread (other topics)
Ubik (other topics)
The New World (other topics)
The Children's Hospital (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Chris Adrian (other topics)Eli Horowitz (other topics)
Karen Russell (other topics)
About the Book (from the book's description on GR)
What is the purpose of life?
If you could send a message to the future what would it be?
Why do you deserve, not desire, to live forever?
Acclaimed author Chris Adrian (The Children's Hospital, The Great Night) joins the award-winning creators of The Silent History – Eli Horowitz and Russell Quinn to create an innovative digital novel about memory, grief and love.
The New World is the story of a marriage. Dr. Jane Cotton is a pediatric surgeon: her husband, Jim, is a humanist chaplain. They are about to celebrate their eighth wedding anniversary when Jim suddenly collapses and dies. When Jane arrives at the hospital she is horrified to find that her husband’s head has been removed from his body. Only then does she discover that he has secretly enrolled with a shadowy cryogenics company called Polaris.
Furious and grieving, Jane fights to reclaim Jim from Polaris. Revived, in the future, Jim learns he must sacrifice every memory of Jane if he wants to stay alive in the new world. Separated by centuries, each of them is challenged to choose between love and fear, intimacy and solitude, life and grief, and each will find an answer to the challenge that is surprising, harrowing, and ultimately beautiful.
About the Authors
Chris Adrian (born 1970) is an American author. Adrian's writing styles in short stories vary greatly; from modernist realism to pronounced lyrical allegory. His novels both tend toward surrealism, having mostly realistic characters experience fantastic circumstances. He has written three novels: Gob's Grief, The Children's Hospital, and The Great Night. In 2008, he published A Better Angel, a collection of short stories. His short fiction has also appeared in The Paris Review, Zoetrope, Ploughshares, McSweeney's, The New Yorker, The Best American Short Stories, and Story. He was one of 11 fiction writers to receive a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2009. He lives in San Francisco. (from Wikipedia)
Eli Horowitz is the co-creator of The Silent History, a digital novel; The Clock Without a Face: A Gus Twintig Mystery, a treasure-hunt mystery; and Everything You Know Is Pong: How Mighty Table Tennis Shapes Our World, an illustrated cultural history of table tennis. He was the managing editor and then publisher of McSweeney’s; his design work has been honored by I.D.,
Print and the American Institute of Graphic Arts. Previously, he wrote science trivia questions based on popular films of the 1990s and was briefly employed as an apprentice carpenter. He was born in Virginia and now lives in Northern California. (from author's website)
Other Links
• Interview -- BuzzFeed: "McSweeney’s was one of the most significant indie publishing houses of the last 20 years — and Eli Horowitz was a central force behind it. Armed with an app-based novel that aspires to be the most bonkers book ever written, can he change that world again?" http://www.buzzfeed.com/annehelenpete...
• Review -- The Guardian: "The New World by Chris Adrian and Eli Horowitz review – ‘Am I alive?’ Originally conceived as a digital novel, this satirical story about cryogenically engineered immortality dissects the ironies and glories of marriage": http://www.theguardian.com/books/2015...
• Review: NPR: http://www.npr.org/2015/05/06/4047398...
• Interview: HuffPost Books: "Karen Russell Interviews Chris Adrian About Digital Books And Story Design": http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/10...