Salon Reading Club

Welcome to the Salon Reading Club

Join us for our first discussion of Justin Cronin's "The Passage"

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Welcome to the Salon Reading Club

Welcome to the first session of Salon’s new Reading Club, everyone! For those just joining us, we’re going to be discussing Justin Cronin’s post-apocalyptic epic, “The Passage,” for the next three Saturdays, beginning today with pages 1 through 246. (Follow the link here for more information on the Salon Reading Club.)

I’m going to kick off the discussion with a few questions and observations, but please feel free to take the conversation wherever you like in the comments thread. Just remember to restrain yourselves from discussing anything that happens after Page 246 so you don’t spoil the story for everybody else. And it should go without saying that if you haven’t gotten to Page 246 yet and don’t want to be spoiled, then don’t read any further. (Personally, I’m not the kind of reader who minds being tipped off to future plot points, so if you’re like me, dive in.) And remember, if you have questions for Justin Cronin himself, don’t forget to post them, since we’ll be interviewing him at the end.

Now, I must confess that I fell for this book in the first chapter because the story of Jeanette and Amy felt so completely and intimately real and heartbreaking to me in a way that I didn’t expect from a nail-biting horror epic. After that, I could never be sure when or if the the novel was going to do that again, which in its own way was as unsettling as not knowing if a monster is going to pop out.

I also especially liked the grim, road-novel aspect of Wolgast and Doyle driving from crummy town to crummy town, staying in motels by night and talking death-row inmates into “volunteering” for scientific experiments by day. As crazy as it might sound for them to jump off the rails the way they did, you can see why they’d be up for bailing on that life.

Anybody else care to mention their favorite parts so far?

One of my biggest reservations about the novel is the character of Richards. He’s got to be a stone-cold bastard for the sake of the plot — who else would inject a little girl with some weird South American virus to see if she’ll turn into a supersoldier? But compared to the other characters in the book, who seem so carefully thought-out, his motivation was the least convincing. What do you think?

Finally, I think that while the nature of the virus is intriguing, it’s obvious that the most burning question raised by the first third of “The Passage” is: What is Amy? Who’d like to speculate?

OK, folks, have at it. Post your thoughts, questions, answers, predictions, complaints — whatever — in the comments thread.

Laura Miller

Laura Miller is a senior writer for Salon. She is the author of "The Magician's Book: A Skeptic's Adventures in Narnia" and has a Web site, magiciansbook.com.

“The Passage”: An apocalyptic epic with heart

Justin Cronin's tale of vampires vs. humans is a mesmerizing combination of literature and pop

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Enthusiasm for “The Passage,” Justin Cronin’s 770-page post-apocalyptic vampire epic, has been swelling in the publishing world for nearly six months now, and chances are that some kind of backlash will kick in even before the book is officially published on June 8. I can well imagine the complaints likely to be lodged against the novel by kneejerk naysayers, but, readers, I am here to assure you: “The Passage” is indeed all that.

Cronin has previously published two conventional literary novels and won a PEN/Hemingway award for one of them. This means that he writes quietly refined sentences and can incise all the finer details of character that make a fictional person seem like someone you’d actually know instead of merely a representative Cop or Scientist or Lawyer. “The Passage” begins a little like a Raymond Carver story, describing how the novel’s enigmatic central figure, Amy Harper Bellafonte, came to be. She’s the product of a brief liaison between a traveling salesman and a waitress in an Iowa diner known to locals as “the Box, because it looked like one: like a big chrome shoe box sitting off the county road, backed by fields of corn and beans, nothing else around for miles except a self-serve car wash, the kind where you had to put coins into the machine and do all the work yourself.”

The story of Amy’s first few years is a piercingly naturalistic tale of downward mobility amid truck stops and cheap motels. Like much of the book, it’s suffused with the doomed yearning of adults who want to protect children from the brutality of the world. Then, suddenly, you’re reading documents about an ill-fated scientific expedition to “the jungles of Bolivia,” and the weird virus brought back by the handful of survivors. From there, it’s off to secret government projects involving experiments on death-row inmates and finally on Amy herself — the typical furniture of paranoid science fiction sagas like “The X-Files” — but always conveyed with those extra grace notes of personality and place too rarely found in genre fiction.

This is the double bind confronting the contemporary reader: a choice between those grace notes and accomplished storytelling — because storytelling is where genre fiction, as a rule, excels. There are those who think the two qualities are mutually exclusive, and they have a point. Clichés and stereotypical characters are familiar and instantly legible; they make for what people like to call a “fast read.” Contrary to what some writers and critics seem to believe, literary prose doesn’t have to meander through vast steppes of adjective-strewn description, but if it aspires to a distinctive voice, to freshness of imagery and psychological depth, then readers aren’t going to be able to rocket through it as if it were a Dan Brown potboiler.

Still, it’s possible to write a novel that revels in narrative momentum and pop mythos while still honoring the textures of real people, places and things. In fact, the novelist who can successfully fuse these two seemingly opposed strains of contemporary fiction can often win a large, devout audience, as Michael Chabon has proven. Lev Grossman and Michael Gruber have been injecting literary elements and ideas into the fantasy novel and the thriller, respectively, as well, but Cronin has set his sights on that peculiarly American genre best epitomized by Stephen King’s “The Stand.”

“The Passage” will remind many readers of “The Stand” as well as another bestseller or two that I won’t name for fear of spoilage. The novel consists of three major movements. The first takes place in the present and recounts how Amy falls into the hands of the operation called Project Noah. The second takes place much later, in a world suffering from the aftereffects of this experimental program. Finally, the third describes the journey of a small desperate group trying to fend off further catastrophe.

Some of Cronin’s motifs and techniques will be vaguely familiar from earlier apocalyptic fiction and films, but that doesn’t wind up mattering as much as you might think. “The Stand” itself harks back to biblical and classical myth — Moses, Aeneas, Odysseus — as does “The Passage”; these stories are fundamental to Western civilization and can be repeated and reworked countless times without becoming worn out, as long as they’re handled with imagination and skill. It’s all in the execution. Cronin gets it just right; the combination of attentive realism and doomsday stakes makes for a mesmerizing experience.

“The Passage” does differ in several important and interesting ways from “The Stand.” Supernatural forces play a subsidiary, even minimal, role in Cronin’s novel, and where King’s instinct is to reach for bold, stark, operatic effects, Cronin is more understated and often more thoughtful. King’s characters tend to be driven by one or two major desires, fears or traits, while Cronin’s people are full of contradictions and surprises. And perhaps most important, the underlying framework of “The Passage” is ultimately less metaphysical than that of “The Stand.” Cronin’s novel isn’t about the clash between good and evil, but about humanity’s struggle to forge a better world in spite of our own worst mistakes.

And, yes, there are vampires, although they’re semiconscious beasts, a far cry from the suave, politicking predators of “True Blood” or the immortal dreamboats of “Twilight.” When you get right down to it, there are two kinds of vampire stories: the kind that’s really about the vampires, and the kind that’s about the human beings fighting them off. “The Passage” belongs to the latter group. Its vampires could just have easily been zombies; they stand for the ravening external forces — time, violence, madness, death — that are forever battering against the walls of every hopeful community.

There’s much more to say about “The Passage,” and I’m hoping you’ll join us for Salon’s new Reading Club to discuss it with us. For more details on the club, visit this page.

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Laura Miller

Laura Miller is a senior writer for Salon. She is the author of "The Magician's Book: A Skeptic's Adventures in Narnia" and has a Web site, magiciansbook.com.

Introducing the Salon Reading Club

Join us every Saturday in June to discuss Justin Cronin's "The Passage" as we read it

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Have you ever been in the middle of reading a great book and longed to discuss it with someone who’s reading it, too? This month, we’re inviting readers to join us in a little experiment, the Salon Reading Club. We’ve selected Justin Cronin’s much-anticipated novel, “The Passage,” to be our inaugural pick, but this isn’t your typical online book group. Here’s how it works:

Each week for the next three weeks, we’ll discuss one portion of the book at a time, as we read it. We’ll speculate about what might happen next, debate how the novel’s characters are changing, and thrash out which themes and ideas have most captured our imagination. Our aim is to foster a richer, more interesting encounter with the book by sharing our responses while we’re reading, not just after we’ve finished.

Here’s the schedule for the Salon Reading Club for Justin Cronin’s “The Passage.”

Saturday, June 12: Pages 1 through 246
Saturday, June 19: Pages 247 through 493
Saturday, June 26: Pages 494 through 766

Every Saturday, Salon’s book critic Laura Miller will kick off the discussion with a few questions, and the discussion will take place on the comments page. “The Passage” is a long book, but definitely a page-turner, so you might not be able to resist reading ahead of the group! If you do, we ask that you avoid spoiling the experience for the rest of the club by refraining from mentioning anything that happens after the pages under consideration for that week.

Along the way, we’ll collect questions for author Justin Cronin. At the end of the month, we’ll select the best questions and Cronin will respond to them.

We hope you’ll join us next Saturday for the first discussion.

Read Laura Miller’s review of “The Passage,” by Justin Cronin.

Order a copy of “The Passage” from barnesandnoble.com.

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