by
4.16 of 5 stars
The novel follows the lives of the title characters, a Czech artist named Joe Kavalier and a Brooklyn-born writer named Sam Clay—both Jewish—before... read full description

reviews

Sep 26, 2007
Jessica rated it: 1 of 5 stars
Michael Chabon and Ayelet Waldman are drinking Peet's coffee and eating zampanos in front of the Cheeseboard on Shattuck Avenue.

MC: Ayelet, I'm trying to think of a new idea for a novel. It's gotta be fresh, bold.... Something nobody's ever thought of before!

AW: Wow, Michael, that's a tough one. There have been so very many novels written over the years, it's hard to come up with something new that's never been done before....

MC: Yeah, I need an idea that's to More...
70 comments like (161 people liked it)
Nov 29, 2010
Paul rated it: 3 of 5 stars
In the street

“Hey!”

“Huh? me?”

“Yeah – you. You wouldn’t know great American literature if a pigeon pooed it all over your anorak.”

Wow – that was surreal… who the hell were those guys?

At the office

“The boss wants to see you.”

Oh my… that’s Mrs Higgins sitting there with Mr Duthie – she’s from the HR department! What’s going on?

“Paul, hi, sit down, yes. This is… rather awkward. You see, it has come to o More...
15 comments like (28 people liked it)
Dec 17, 2009
W rated it: 3 of 5 stars
"Absolutely, gosh ,wow" (cover quip) on his sentences? Yes, very yes. Chabon can flat out compose sentences. Think Dickens, Pynchon, Tolstoy. But that's it. You keep waiting for the sentences to compile some meaning but they never seem to achieve any depth. He uses the backdrop of the comic book heydays, WWII, and magic acts, his neither here nor there Jewish-ness, to stitch together an overly long book that basically explores the relationship between two male characters who are carica More...
4 comments like (16 people liked it)
Dec 16, 2009
Kelly rated it: 4 of 5 stars
Whenever I mentioned the name of this book to a friend, a huge grin broke out of their face. This was a universal reaction. As were the words: "I LOVE that book. That book is GREAT." Not just how good it was, or skilled writing (though those things are also very true), but just how in love with it they were. You can't fake that. And now I know why! It's the sort of book you just get deeply attached to. Which usually doesn't come with this level of writing skill. This is a rarity. A cla More...
19 comments like (36 people liked it)
May 05, 2008
Nathan rated it: 1 of 5 stars
I did not get this book. First of all, there was too much gay rape. Second, not enough cocaine. Also, I do not like cartoons. This book could be renamed Superman Had Daddy Issues and nobody would know the difference, except the people who read it, who wouldn't care anyway, 'cause they'd all be too shocked about the gay rape. Ban this useless book from Good Reads.

NC
28 comments like (17 people liked it)
Jan 04, 2012
Katja rated it: 3 of 5 stars
This book might eventually merit a new shelf: stuff I keep trying to read and put aside because while they are good and everyone raves about them I just jump at the chance to read almost anything else.
In terms of writing, scope of imagination, and peregrinations of plot, completely deserving of its Pulitzer, but there's a self-congratulatory facility, a "look how I make a marginalized hobby into an academic metaphor for life and growing up in America and I TALK ABOUT THE HOLOCAUS More...
1 comment like (7 people liked it)
Aug 25, 2008
Sarahfina rated it: 1 of 5 stars
Aaron and I are starting a club for people who hated this boring, boring book. Anyone want to join?
10 comments like (24 people liked it)
Dec 07, 2010
Laura added it
I know I'm totally an outlier on this one. But I tried four times, literally four times, to read this and could never get past page 50. It's extraordinary enough for me to give a book a second chance after flunking my 50-page rule, but a third and a fourth? That was enough for me. And I love comic books, too. So go figure.
7 comments like (6 people liked it)
May 06, 2008
Taka rated it: 4 of 5 stars
Awesome (4.5)--

Chabon is now one of my three favorite contemporary writers (others are David Foster Wallace and Neal Stephenson) with his graceful, elegant prose, extensive vocabulary, and entertaining plot. While the book was not "fall-on-the-floor-funny" as one reviewer says, it certainly was entertaining and beautifully written. I really was floored by many of his metaphors.

Many reviewers complain of Chabon's narration that does a lot more telling than showin More...
2 comments like (5 people liked it)
Apr 30, 2008
Randall rated it: 5 of 5 stars
Recently, I attended the Mountains and Plains regional trade show in Denver. As I was walking out the door to go to the airport, I realized I did not have a book to read during my flight. I dropped my suitcase and walked over to my book shelf. Hurriedly scanning the books, my eyes settled on ‘The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay’ the Pulitzer Prize winning novel by Michael Chabon. I bought this when it first released in 2000. Back then, I got about 50 pages into it and gave up. I don’t kn More...
0 comments like (15 people liked it)
Mar 27, 2008
will rated it: 5 of 5 stars


Is it just me or do you hate it when you can see how a book is going to end and you don't want it end that way? With 100+ pages to go, I lowered the book and sulked. Sulked in that way I knew that Maria would ask what was wrong. She did. She never fails me.

Do you not like the book?

I did. I loved the book. The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay by Michael Chabon is a wonderful book. Maria's kids wanted to buy their father a book for his birthday and had pi More...
1 comment like (8 people liked it)
Jul 29, 2008
Grant rated it: 3 of 5 stars
this is a bit of a rant. i liked this book, but it just did not live up to my expectations. what to say. not quite sure. it opens great. sammy's background with his father and joe's escape from prague are a wonderful set up. but in some ways, in particular joe's very adventurous beginning, the beginning is unbalanced. we never really see that kind of adventure again. but nor do we want to, because the beauty of this novel is that "the amazing adventures" of these two men are More...
5 comments like (5 people liked it)
Sep 15, 2010
Alex rated it: 5 of 5 stars
THE AMAZING ADVENTURES OF KAVALIER AND CLAY BY MICHAEL CHABON: Michael Chabon, author of Wonder Boys, brings us the Pulitzer Prize winning The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay. A riveting novel of the comic book world set against the backdrop of the Second World War. Its two heroes, Joe Kavalier and Sam Clay, fight through the world of color, ink and writing, to compete with the likes of Superman and Batman - the result is an amazing story that has never been told.

This is a co More...
0 comments like (7 people liked it)
Dec 16, 2009
Samantha rated it: 1 of 5 stars
I hated this book. For me the characters were not only unlikeable but lifeless. The whole thing was contrived and pretentious and painful to read from start to finish. I am dumbfounded by people's enthusiasm for this book. Dumbfounded.
1 comment like (13 people liked it)
Dec 17, 2008
H L rated it: 4 of 5 stars
An odd thing about Chabon - when I'm immersed in the middle of one of his books, I'm as fully engaged as with just about any work by anyone else I've ever read. But, inevitably, as I near the end of his novels, I sense a growing distance, and somehow, upon reaching the end, I'm disengaged, and no longer have that compelling urge and desire to want to know more, as you might in a book you don't wish to end; nor do I find the sense of completion that works its way into being at the completion of o More...
3 comments like (4 people liked it)
Apr 11, 2008
Nathan rated it: 2 of 5 stars
I read this book mostly because I had heard that Chabon has mad writing skillz (when someone has skills with a "z" it's pretty impressive). Chabon certainly has a way with words. This book only earned two stars from me for two reasons. The first being that the book was altogether too long. I felt several parts could have been stricken from the book and the story would not have suffered for it.

The second, and more controversial reason, is that I did not care for the grap More...
1 comment like (3 people liked it)
Jan 18, 2008
Kate rated it: 5 of 5 stars

Book Review: Michael Chabon, The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay, (Harper Perennial, London, 2005)

When I chose to study my Twentieth Century American Literature module, I did so in spite of this book, rather than because of it. The idea of a book about comic books did not exactly enamour me. I'm not a fan of the genre (the main reason being the amount of time it would take to go back and become up to speed with it all).

At 636 pages of rather small (althoug More...
0 comments like (7 people liked it)
Jul 11, 2007
Hubcap rated it: 3 of 5 stars
i couldn't help it! one day i went down to the fiction floor of the library when i was supposed to be doing something industrious and boring and ended up with this in my hand. we'll see...

(LATER THAT MONTH) sitting in the car on monday night, i had a long discussion with my novel dealer and confidante the Frog about michael chabon's writing. here was my experience with this book. i felt informed, interested and edified about the world of pre-wwii prague that chabon vivified, about th More...
1 comment like (2 people liked it)
Dec 16, 2009
Jennifer rated it: 4 of 5 stars
I recently heard an interview in which Michael Chabon compared his plotting skills to Bob Dylan's singing skills -- Chabon feels he is not a naturally gifted plotter, but he enjoys a good plot so much that he is willing to work hard to find his own voice, so to speak. What most struck me about the plot of Kavalier and Clay are the risks Chabon is willing to take -- moving the action to truly unexpected places. Some of the routes he takes to get to his destination feel a bit circuitous, with the More...
0 comments like (2 people liked it)
Oct 16, 2008
Jeffrey rated it: 1 of 5 stars
michael chabon has co-opted the rich history of comicdom's golden age to produce his signature melodrama. in choosing to totally squander the potential of said history to tell a trite, glitzy story of successful Jewish boys torn apart by war and their love for a woman, he's making light of his superior source materials in a way that's frustrating for anyone who has grown up with serious appreciation for comics. it's clear chabon has read comics and that he likes them, but i'm not altogether sur More...
0 comments like (6 people liked it)
Jan 10, 2012
Shovelmonkey1 rated it: 5 of 5 stars
The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay is amazing. Well, some of it is. To be specific I found it fairly amazing up until about page 429. Then it got slightly less amazing which was sad really because, prior to that it was zipping along so nicely like Superman with a new stream-lined cape sliding in and out of the slip stream. After page 429 it became a bit more like Superman trying to erratically jump over tall buildings with Dr Octopus tied to one leg and the Juggernaut tied to the other. More...
11 comments like (16 people liked it)
Oct 24, 2007
J rated it: 1 of 5 stars
chabon's a good writer, and for the first 50 pages or so, I thought it was gonna be a good one. but then it just started to suck. I shouldn't even have finished it, but I did. can't believe it won a pulizter or whatever. he beats you over the head with the escape/escapist theme, the reader had totally figured out that the main dude is gay for like 150 pages before the gay guy does, argh god it was awful....
0 comments like (5 people liked it)
Jan 26, 2009
Peter added it
I consider myself an aficionado of scrambled eggs. I cook them every day. So, of all the remarkably researched details that Chabon gets right, I was most impressed when one character explains the best way to scramble an egg—and he’s spot on.

Amazing, indeed. The title of the novel sounds childish and gamey, but it is apt; to read this is to embark on an amazing adventure.

The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay is the story of two comic book-loving Jewish cousins—one fro More...
0 comments like (1 person liked it)
Apr 27, 2011
Kathleen rated it: 2 of 5 stars
This book left me pretty cold. The only character who interested me much was Joe. The rest were at best unappealing, at worst repellant. Granted, the whole comic book scene of the late 40’s and early 50’s has little enough interest for me, but I don’t think that was the problem.

This is not a funny book, though parts of it are funny. It’s more of a saga, really, and is longer than the material merits, in my humble opinion. Michael Chabon is rather a long-winded guy, as I pointe More...
0 comments like (1 person liked it)
Jan 11, 2012
Chris rated it: 3 of 5 stars
Bloated with historical detail, it reminded me why I never liked reading history textbooks: no matter how salient the facts, external detail just can't move me in the way that empathetic, developed internal detail can. I think Chabon should have either written a creative non-fiction work about the comic book heyday (for which he obviously has a strong passion) or focused more on writing a gripping novel. I imagine that if you're as enthralled with comic books and their place in American history More...
0 comments like (1 person liked it)
Apr 23, 2011
Kernos rated it: 5 of 5 stars
An amazing book.

Kavalier operates on a number of levels. It is a romance, a love triangle among Joe, Sammy and Rosa all loving each other in various ways. It is an historical fiction about the Golden Age of comic books featuring many of the big names in the industry. It is a literary exploration of the concept of Escape, physical and psychologic—from magician tricks, from political pogroms. from reality, from closets, from guilt and fear. And like comics, the joys, hopes and sorrows, More...
5 comments like (3 people liked it)
Jan 30, 2011
Dominic rated it: 5 of 5 stars
Michael Chabon is an artist of the highest order. The sentences in The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay had my mind doing backflips. I couldn't help but think of Dostoevsky, of Joyce, of Woolf, of Morrison. This guy can really write--and to my delight, Chabon has written many novels I can start devouring in the future.

But more than the simple, aesthetic pleasure of reading all 636 pages of narrative prose, I became enraptured by these characters. So enraptured, in fact, by Sam More...
0 comments like (3 people liked it)
Jun 20, 2010
Jennifer (aka EM) rated it: 4 of 5 stars
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here
3 comments like (2 people liked it)
Aug 21, 2011
Frenk rated it: 4 of 5 stars
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here
0 comments like (1 person liked it)
Jul 16, 2008
Maggie rated it: 5 of 5 stars
Much like Catch-22, A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius and Fortress of Solitude, The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay has long been on my list of "books I'm pretty sure I'll really like, but daaaamn it's long so maybe later." But after listening to two of my sophomore boys gush over it last spring, I decided that if they can find time for Michael Chabon's materpiece, then so can I.

And so I did.

And I am so, so glad.

Hailing from Prag More...
0 comments like (6 people liked it)