

The Escapist, it seems, allows them to break out from the traps of their own unheroic lives. The team of Kavalier and Clay use their superhero to fight not only fiend-on-the-street crime, but to lash out at the unspeakable breach committed by the Nazis, to unlock the mysteries of their maturing personae, and to reach levels of fame and influence they could not have expected.

And here's where Chabon lives up to that promised intelligence. In New York, he moves in with an aunt and his cousin Sammy Klayman (soon to be Clay), who dreams up the idea of using Kavalier's impressive artistic talents to create their wealth inspired by the leaps and bounds of Superman comics.What they devise is a surefire hero named The Escapist.

Kavalier has left his home circuitously (scrambling through Japan and the American West before reaching New York) and with understandably mixed feelings - it is the place where he grew up with his younger brother Thomas and learned Houdini-like tricks in hopes of becoming a world-class magician. Perhaps the best adjective for the wonder boy here is "vertiginous." Joe Kavalier, the showier half of the title duo, opens the narrative by arriving in Brooklyn in 1939 after his family sends him away from Prague in order to save him from a certain Nazi death. The novel becomes, at the same time, a Holocaust tale, a reflection on sex and surrealist art, and an encyclopedia of escapists and tricks. But the ambitious Chabon uses his deeply affecting characters to cast his own light on the general state of the world from the late 1930s to the mid-Fifties. On one level, of course, The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay is simply a well-spun tale of two cousins who create a comic book empire out of talent and fortune over several rough years. "lyrical" and "beguiling." With his expansive new novel, the author of Wonder Boys and Werewolves in Their Youths makes a wholehearted effort at achieving that most dangerous adjective of all: epic. "Intelligent" he has been called many times, and Michael Chabon has won many trophy adjectives for his relatively short literary career. The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay by Michael Chabon
