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Dietz Aaron

Författare till Super

6 verk 28 medlemmar 4 recensioner

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Foto taget av: Photo by Pei-Yu Lin, image-editing by Charlie Potter

Verk av Dietz Aaron

Super (2010) 16 exemplar
Reserved For Emperors (2006) 5 exemplar
The Minute 3 exemplar
In Case I Die 2 exemplar
Spam and Elephants 1 exemplar

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Dietz, Aaron
Bostadsorter
Ames, Iowa, USA
Denver, Colorado, USA
Iowa City, Iowa, USA
Seattle, Washington, USA
Yrken
instructional designer
Kort biografi
Aaron Dietz is the author of Super, a novel from Emergency Press about commitment, crisis, paperwork, and heartbreak. As an instructional designer, Dietz has written online high school courses on computer programming, green design, and 3-D video game creation. It’s natural for him to write quizzes. He’s worked a decade in libraries. He’s also been paid to count traffic and once failed a personality test. Dietz writes for TheNervousBreakdown.com, blogs at aarondietz.us, and is an advisory editor of KNOCK Magazine.

Medlemmar

Recensioner

A surprisingly readable and absorbing experimental novel about superheroes, structured around a series of exams for a superhero registration organization.
 
Flaggad
EricRosenfield | 2 andra recensioner | Nov 1, 2021 |
What an incredibly charming collection of flash fiction! I'm already a big fan of Dietz's writing as you'll find exhibited by my review of his last novel, Super. Spam and Elephants is a fast read, containing 24 short-short stories crafted with a deft touch. Dietz manages to blend elements of absurdity, realism, experimentalism, science fiction, humor and pathos without ever losing control of his material. I'm even more amazed to learn that Dietz wrote this collection in one month. Apparently he took 10 years to write Super, so in order to kick himself in the ass, he initiated a project he calls 12 in 12 where he intends to write twelve books in a year. Well count* me impressed, I'm looking forward to the remaining eleven. Spam and Elephants left me energized and excited by a writer who is playing in ways that is not alienating or cold as so much experimental fiction is.

*"count"--see what I did there?
… (mer)
 
Flaggad
David_David_Katzman | Nov 26, 2013 |
How was it? Super, thanks for asking! I quite enjoyed this book. It’s a very fast read, actually, and I powered it down. Which makes sense given that it’s about superheroes. Get it? Powered it down? Sorry, I’ll go back to sleep.

Okay, I’m awake again. Where was I? Ah, Super. It’s quite a charming concept. You are applying for a job as a superhero with the local city government. (Turns out … superhero jobs don’t pay all that well.) The book consists of a series of these applications as you attempt to move up from a first level superhero to a tenth level superhero. The applications describe various heroic actions that a hero must successfully perform (in the danger room/holodeck) in order to qualify for the next level. After explaining the deeds, the applications describe various hypothetical superhero scenarios followed by questions about those scenarios. The scenarios seem intended to be linguistic Rorschach tests, and the questions are for evaluation of your psychological suitability for promotion.

I really enjoyed Super and here’s why: 1) I’m a nerd; 2) The hypothetical scenarios were like connected short stories (featuring some overlapping characters), and I found them to be damn good short stories. I wanted more of them and didn’t want them to end. The hypothetical superheroes felt like real people with significant personal flaws, and I wanted to follow their lives. The tone of the stories was surprisingly melancholy, almost wistful, and mysterious, which contrasted sharply with the somewhat absurd nature of the “heroic tasks” posed by the application. I wish Dietz had written a novel about these characters! I would’ve loved that.

The application wrappers to the stories didn’t really do much for me. They seem intended to mock government bureaucracy a bit, and, sure, I’m not a fan of government bureaucracy, but I don’t find it a significant threat when compared to corporate inhumanity. It’s not that I disliked the applications, but after the first couple, I skimmed through them to get to the fantastic stories.

The premise was super-clever, and Dietz is a great writer. I’m looking forward to future work.
… (mer)
 
Flaggad
David_David_Katzman | 2 andra recensioner | Nov 26, 2013 |
I've known this book since it was a baby, and now it's all grown up!

I'm not the most unbiased reviewer, having helped a bit here and there, but in spite of that, I think I can say that this is one of the most clever takes on the superhero genre I've seen.

Just imagine that your superheroes worked for a government agency, not a super government agency, but one that you might find as part of your local city or county government. (Don't get me wrong! These are human beings in the cogs of the government machine, super-powered though they may be.)

Dietz's brilliant idea was to frame the book as a job application, complete with psychological evaluation, which allowed him to experiment with different modes of storytelling, from straight up narrative to comics and even to a word find!

If you like superheroes (and, seriously, even if you don't) there's a lot to get out of this book.

Buy it! Read it! Love it!
… (mer)
1 rösta
Flaggad
paperclypse | 2 andra recensioner | Oct 28, 2010 |

Priser

Statistik

Verk
6
Medlemmar
28
Popularitet
#471,397
Betyg
½ 4.6
Recensioner
4
ISBN
4