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The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao

 
Wikipedia: The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao
The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao  
Junot wao cover.jpg
First edition hardcover
Author Junot Díaz
Country United States
Language English, Spanish
Publisher Riverhead
Publication date September 6, 2007
Media type Print (Hardcover and Paperback)
Pages 352 pp
ISBN 1594489580
OCLC Number 123539681
Dewey Decimal 813/.54 22
LC Classification PS3554.I259 B75 2007
Preceded by Drown

The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao (2007) is a best-selling novel written by Dominican-American author Junot Díaz. Although a work of fiction, the novel is set in New Jersey where Díaz was raised and deals explicitly with his ancestral homeland's experience under dictator Rafael Trujillo.[1] It has received numerous positive reviews from critics and went on to win numerous prestigious awards in 2008, such as the National Book Critics Circle Award and the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction.[2] The title is a nod to Hemingway's short story "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber"[3] and to the Irish writer Oscar Wilde.

Contents

Plot introduction

The novel is an epic story narrated by Yunior de Las Casas and chronicles not just the "brief wondrous life of Oscar Wao," an overweight Dominican boy growing up in Paterson, New Jersey and obsessed with science fiction and fantasy novels, with comic books and role-playing games and with falling in love, but also the curse of the "fukú" that has plagued Oscar's family for generations and the Caribbean (and perhaps the entire world) since colonization and slavery.

The middle sections of the novel center on the lives of Oscar's runaway sister, Lola, his mother, Hypatia Belicia Cabral, and his grandfather, Abelard, under the dictatorship of Rafael Trujillo. Rife with footnotes, science fiction and fantasy references, comic book analogies, various Spanish dialects and hip-hop inflected urban English, the novel is also a meditation on story-telling, the Dominican diaspora and identity, masculinity, the contours of authoritarian power and the long horrifying history of slavery in the New World.

Book Format

The novel is divided up into different sections that center around specific relatives of Oscar Wao's family:

  • 1974-1987 - "GhettoNerd at the End of the World" - Oscar Wao
  • 1982-1985 - "Wildwood" - Lola
  • 1955-1962 - "The Three Heartbreaks of Belicia Cabral" - Hypatia "Belicia" Cabral
  • 1988-1992 - "Sentimental Education" - Oscar Wao and Yunior
  • 1944-1946 - "Poor Abelard" - Abelard Luis Cabral
  • 1992-1995 - "Land of the Lost" - Oscar Wao
  • "The Final Voyage" - Oscar Wao
  • "The End of the Story" - Oscar Wao and Yunior

Critical reception

The novel was an overwhelming critical success, appearing in over thirty-five best-of-the-year book lists [4] and winning the John Sargent Senior First Novel Prize, the Dayton Peace Prize in Fiction, the National Book Critics Circle Award as well as the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 2008. New York magazine named it the Best Novel of the Year and Time magazine's Lev Grossman named it #1 of the Top 10 Fiction Books of 2007, praising it as "a massive, heaving, sparking tragicomedy".[5]

References

External links

Awards
Preceded by
The Road
by Cormac McCarthy
Pulitzer Prize for Fiction
2008
Succeeded by
Olive Kitteridge
by Elizabeth Strout
Preceded by
The Inheritance of Loss
by Kiran Desai
National Book Critics Circle Award
2007
Succeeded by
2666
by Roberto Bolaño

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