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brainwane ([personal profile] brainwane) wrote in [community profile] 50books_poc2017-04-14 12:25 pm

Colson Whitehead, "The Underground Railroad", 2016

I read The Underground Railroad in 2016. I thought it was engaging, moving, and accessible,* and I nominated it for a Hugo Award (Best Novel).

Na'amen Gobert Tilahun reviewed Underground Airlines as well as The Underground Railroad in Strange Horizons and discussed several aspects of both books. That review mentions speculative elements in Whitehead's book beyond the railroad mentioned in the title, in case you are wary of spoilers.

I have read John Henry Days, The Intuitionist, and I think at least one other Whitehead book, and am trying to reflect on how Whitehead approaches and uses the railroad, because I think it's different than the way a lot of speculative fiction authors do, and has more in common with how other mimetic fiction authors tend to use speculative premises. I want to compare The Underground Railroad to Never Let Me Go, where the story doesn't concentrate on (or, sometimes, even mention) the origin story of the big plot premise, and instead the story is entirely about the lives of people living or resisting -- just for themselves, to survive or thrive -- within that system.

* I think Whitehead deliberately works to make the book accessible to people who have not previously read slave narratives, fictional or nonfiction -- I think he spells out subtext more often than he would if he assumed the reader had more of a grounding in antebellum history or the history of anti-black racism in the US.
makamu: (Default)

[personal profile] makamu 2017-04-14 05:26 pm (UTC)(link)
Thanks for posting this review, which looks like it will be really useful when I decide whether to get this book or not
princessofburundi: (books and candle)

[personal profile] princessofburundi 2017-05-05 06:21 pm (UTC)(link)
I was initially engaged by the book, but it didn't live up to my expectations, mainly because I simply cannot handle descriptions of torture. They give me nightmares. I honestly don't know whether or not the book was good or not, what I do know is that it was too much for me personally.