"Lightning" by Jean Echenoz [Read This Next]
This week’s title is Lightning by Jean Echenoz, a book that I truly love. Simply put, Echenoz’s charm + Tesla’s crazy genius = Incredibly Engaging Novel.
Over the rest of the week, we’ll be posting a few things about Echenoz’s general career (his noir books, his transitional period, the Eccentric Genius suite), along with an piece about an interview I did with translator Linda Coverdale, and a full length review of the book.
For now, and here’s the short intro to the book:
Echenoz has had an interesting and diverse career as a writer. His first few books鈥擾Cherokee_, Big Blondes, Double Jeopardy, Chopin鈥檚 Move_鈥攁re fun, noirish sort of novels. A few years back though, after _I鈥檓 Gone and Piano, Echenoz embarked on a 鈥渟uite鈥 of three books about historical figures: Ravel (about Maurice Ravel), Running (about Emil Z谩topek), and Lightning (about Nikola Tesla).
These three novels may signal a sort of new direction in terms of what Echenoz is writing about, but all three are infused with the typical Echenoz voice. And it鈥檚 that signature voice that transforms the 鈥淓ccentric Genius Suite鈥 from a series of biographies or historical works into charming novels that lucidly depict the quirky lives these people led.
Over the past few years, Tesla has sort of come back into the public eye, especially thanks to Samatha Hunt鈥檚 The Invention of Everything Else. The reasons for this resurgence of interest are varied, ranging from the general strangeness of his person and the movie-like quality of his life, to the way that Tesla was one of the last pure inventors鈥攐ne who was destroyed by big business and his own inability to function in that world.
Lightning is a stunning novel that is captivating right from the start. In our advance preview, you can read about Gregor/Tesla鈥檚 birth, his early successes, his fall out with Edison (who always comes off as a bastard when you read about Tesla), and the start of the 鈥淲ar of Currents.鈥

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