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Kelly Link's Magic For Beginners is reviewed in the New York Times by Michael Knight (yes, really). He seems a bit confused:
Take ''Some Zombie Contingency Plans.'' It's about a recently released convict who drives around the suburbs looking for parties to crash because he's lonely. There are zombies here, but are they real? The premise is fresh and the characters (the con, the girl whose party he crashes, her little brother who sleeps under the bed) are likable and Link puts a metafictional twist on the narrative voice (''This is a story about being lost in the woods,'' she says), but the story doesn't quite come together, and those zombies -- are they supposed to be a metaphor?
Scott Westerfeld explains:
Allow me to explain, Mr. Non-sf-Reading Reviewer Man. Sure, zombies can “be a metaphor.” They can represent the oppressed, as in Land of the Dead, or humanity’s feral nature, as in 28 Days. Or racial politics or fear of contagion or even the consumer unconscious (Night of the Living Dead, Resident Evil, Dawn of the Dead). We could play this game all night.

But really, zombies are not “supposed to be metaphors.” They’re supposed to be friggin’ zombies. They follow the Zombie Rules: they rise from death to eat the flesh of the living, they shuffle in slow pursuit (or should, anyway), and most important, they multiply exponentially. They bring civilization down, taking all but the most resourceful, lucky and well-armed among us, whom they save for last. They make us the hunted; all of us.

That’s the stuff zombies are supposed to do. Yes, they make excellent symbols, and metaphors, and have kick-ass mytho-poetic resonance to boot. But their main job is to follow genre conventions, to play with and expand the Zombie Rules, to make us begin to see the world as a place colored by our own zombie contingency plans.
EDIT: A relevant comment at Making Light:
I got into a rather heated argument a few months back with someone who was insisting that Tooth and Claw was good because "it isn't really about dragons." I said that it was too really about dragons, and that it would have been a much worse novel if it had not been really about dragons. "But I mean, really about dragons," said the other person. And I said yes, really about dragons. It didn't matter how many kinds of typographical emphasis she attempted to vocalize: Tooth and Claw is about dragons.

It also does other things, but if every little thing in it was a metaphor for man's inhumanity to radishes or some damn thing, it would suck.

Date: 2005-08-13 03:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chance88088.livejournal.com
please - it's not like you were making a valiant effort all on your own you know. you are weak!

Date: 2005-08-13 03:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] immortalradical.livejournal.com
Are you making the ludicrous suggestion that I should small text with Niall?

Date: 2005-08-13 03:34 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chance88088.livejournal.com
eeep! no - I am just suggesting you were a party to said literary discussion.

small text with Niall would be creepy

Date: 2005-08-13 03:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] immortalradical.livejournal.com
I was bored. And there was no small text. Anywhere!

But small text with me is not the creepy, right?

Date: 2005-08-13 03:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] snowking.livejournal.com
I'd say about 6 out of 10, maybe 7.

Date: 2005-08-13 04:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chance88088.livejournal.com
Ah well, I guess I forgive you for your lapse.

small text with you is super awesome double plus good

Date: 2005-08-13 04:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] immortalradical.livejournal.com
I knew you'd understand.

Bantastic!

Date: 2005-08-13 04:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chance88088.livejournal.com
And look, we've killed all literary discussion.

Bantasmagorical! the power of small text is vast

Date: 2005-08-13 04:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] immortalradical.livejournal.com
Need literary discussion gone, fast? Hire ... Um. OK, I tried to come up with some fusion of our names and got 'Dance'.

You make up Ban words with easy abandon. It's something to watch.

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