The New York Review of Books

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Cathleen Schine, Imaginary Friends

Michael Chabon’s Telegraph Avenue, the story of the ordinary lives of two imperfect, rather ordinary families, is as much a fantasy as The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay or even The Yiddish Policemen’s Union. It might, oddly, be his most original book as well.

Photo: Michael Chabon, Berkeley, California, circa 2003 (Michael Murphree/Corbis Outline)

Posted at 4:31pm and tagged with: prose, friday reads, The New York Review of Books, michael chabon, cathleen schine, imaginary friends, literature, book reviews,.

Cathleen Schine, Imaginary Friends

Michael Chabon’s Telegraph Avenue, the story of the ordinary lives of two imperfect, rather ordinary families, is as much a fantasy as The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay or even The Yiddish Policemen’s Union. It might, oddly, be his most original book as well.

Photo: Michael Chabon, Berkeley, California, circa 2003 (Michael Murphree/Corbis Outline)
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