![]() It is that rare thing: a satire that has a love of what it satirizes while also functioning as a modern fairy tale about, of all things, the magic of certain carbohydrates.įor this to be a chemical rather than physical reaction, Sloan must display a sure and natural knowledge of high-tech culture and of bread culture (in both senses). Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore,” displays both lightness and a yearning for escape, but only in the best sense. It may also make us miss out on some great fiction about odd bread, an imaginary country and the processes behind making robot arms.Īll of which is to say that Robin Sloan’s delightful new novel, “Sourdough,” the follow-up to his runaway success “Mr. There’s a sense that our fictions should be of Earth-shattering import in the obvious ways, and this perhaps desensitizes us to other examples of subversion and narrative. ![]() In this day and age, under our current political conditions, you’d be forgiven for mistaking lightness for triteness, escape for escapism. ![]()
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