Homeland Elegies Explained

Homeland Elegies
Author:Ayad Akhtar
Country:United States
Language:English
Genre:Fiction
Publisher:Little, Brown and Company
Release Date:September 15, 2020
Pages:343 pages
Isbn:978-0316496421

Homeland Elegies is a novel by author Ayad Akhtar.

Writing and background

The book is fiction, though written to resemble a memoir.[1] It includes some autobiographical elements; the protagonist shares the name, background, and career of the author.[1] Homeland Elegies has been referred to as autofiction.[2] Akhtar has spoken about wanting the effect of the novel to be like scrolling through social media: "It's essay. It's memoir. It's fiction. It just had to be seamless, in the way that a platform like Instagram is seamless. And one of the pivotal dimensions of that content is the staging and curation of the self."[3] He adds that crafting the book in the first person, and calling the narrator "Ayad Akhtar" allows him "to have a relationship to the reader that felt more immediate than fiction. But I only know how to write fiction ... I wouldn't have known how to write a memoir."[4]

The idea for writing Homeland Elegies came to Akhtar while he was in Rome, reading Giacomo Leopardi's Canti. The first poem "To Italy" inspired him to write a novel about America, that "seemed on the verge of splitting apart". Homeland Elegies begins with "An Overture to America" and then is divided into eight sections, followed by a coda entitled "Free Speech". Akhtar modeled sections off of different Tolstoy novellas: "V. Riaz; or the Merchant of Death" off of Hadji Murad; "VI. Of Love and Death" off of The Kreutzer Sonata; and "VIII. Langford v. Reliant; or, How My Father's American Story Ends" off of The Death of Ivan Ilych.

The book comments on the recent political and financial history of the United States[5] including the election of Donald Trump, the September 11 attacks, and America's debt-fueled economy.[6]

Reception

Critical reception

Dwight Garner, in his review for The New York Times, praised Homeland Elegies as "a beautiful novel about an American son and his immigrant father". Garner perceived "echoes" of The Great Gatsby in the novel, stating that it "circles, with pointed intellect, the possibilities and limitations of American life".[7] Rafia Zakaria, writing for the Boston Globe, compared the work favorably to the novels and memoir of Salman Rushdie.[8] Alexandra Schwartz, in her profile of Akhtar in The New Yorker, called the novel "a crescendo of grievance reminiscent of Allen Ginsberg's Howl ... [Akhtar] denounces the nation's recent sins and failures ... rails against the country's cult of greed, its prostitution of private life for public attention, its allegiance to devices ... to give his own account of the riven nation."[3] Ron Charles of The Washington Post lauded the book, calling it a "tour de force" and declared that he would not be surprised "if it wins [Akhtar] a second Pulitzer Prize".[9] Junot Diaz, reviewing the book for O Magazine, called Homeland Elegies "the book of the year".[10]

Based on a survey of 31 reviews from literary journalists, Literary Hub's Book Marks rated Homeland Elegies critical response a "Rave".[11]

Honors

Homeland Elegies was named a top 10 book of 2020 by The New York Times, The Washington Post, Publishers Weekly, Entertainment Weekly, Shelf Awareness, and Time.[12] [13] [14] [15] [16] [17]

O Magazine, Slate, Kirkus Reviews, NPR, The Economist, Library Journal, and the New York Public Library named Homeland Elegies as one of the best books of 2020.[18] [19] [20] [21] [22] [23]

Barack Obama named Homeland Elegies one of his favorite books of 2020.[24]

The novel was a finalist for the 2021 Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence in Fiction.[25]

Homeland Elegies won the 2021 American Book Award[26] and the 2021 Wisconsin Library Association Literary Award.[27]

Television adaptation

FX is developing an eight-episode limited series of Homeland Elegies, adapted by Akhtar and Oren Moverman, who will direct all eight episodes. Kumail Nanjiani will star in the series.[28]

Notes and References

  1. News: Butler . Isaac . Seeking the Truth About Trump's America by Blurring Fact and Fiction . 11 January 2021 . . 7 December 2020 .
  2. News: Elgrably . Jordan . Trump Derangement Syndrome, or How I Learned to Love America: On Ayad Akhtar's "Homeland Elegies" . 11 January 2021 . Los Angeles Review of Books . 10 November 2020.
  3. Schwartz. Alexandra. An American Writer for an Age of Division. 2021-02-22. The New Yorker. 11 September 2020.
  4. Web site: 2020-10-01. Ayad Akhtar on a New Kind of Autofiction. 2021-02-22. Literary Hub.
  5. News: Elgenaidi . Deena . "Homeland Elegies" Examines What It Means to Be Muslim American Post-9/11 . 11 January 2021 . Electric Literature . 17 September 2020.
  6. News: Rebolini . Arianna . 'Because I'm Muslim, I Must Be Writing About Muslims. I'm Trying To Write About This Country.' A Conversation With Ayad Akhtar . 11 January 2021 . BuzzFeed News . 18 September 2020.
  7. News: Garner . Dwight . With Wit and Anger, Ayad Akhtar Addresses What It Means to Be American . 11 January 2021 . . 14 September 2020.
  8. News: Zakaria . Rafia . A glimpse of Rushdie's children in 'Homeland Elegies' - The Boston Globe . 11 January 2021 . Boston Globe . 10 September 2020.
  9. News: Charles. Ron. Review Ayad Akhtar's play 'Disgraced' won a Pulitzer Prize. Now 'Homeland Elegies' shows what that success cost him. . The Washington Post. 2021-02-22. 0190-8286.
  10. Web site: Díaz. Junot. 2020-09-01. Ayad Akhtar's"Homeland Elegies" Is an Immigrant Saga Unlike Any Other. 2021-02-22. 'O Magazine.
  11. Web site: Book Marks reviews of Homeland Elegies by Ayad Akhtar. 2021-02-22. Book Marks.
  12. News: 23 November 2020. The 10 Best Books of 2020. The New York Times. 11 January 2021.
  13. News: . November 19, 2020. The 10 Best Books of 2020. The Washington Post.
  14. Web site: Best Books 2020: Publishers Weekly Publishers Weekly. 2021-02-22. PublishersWeekly.com.
  15. The 10 Best Fiction Books of 2020. 2021-02-22. Time.
  16. The 10 best books of 2020. 2021-02-22. Entertainment Weekly.
  17. Web site: Shelf Awareness for Readers for Tuesday, December 1, 2020. 2021-02-22. www.shelf-awareness.com.
  18. Web site: Haber. Leigh. Hart. Michelle. Cain. Hamilton. 2020-11-19. These Are the Best Books of 2020, According to O, The Oprah Magazine. 2021-02-22. O Magazine.
  19. News: Miller . Laura . The Best Books of 2020 . 11 January 2021 . Slate . 10 December 2020.
  20. Web site: Best of 2020. 2021-02-22. Kirkus Reviews.
  21. Web site: Best Books for Adults 2020. 2021-02-22. The New York Public Library.
  22. Web site: NPR's Best Books of 2020. 2021-02-22. apps.npr.org.
  23. News: 2020-12-03. Our books of the year. The Economist. 2021-02-22. 0013-0613.
  24. News: Merry. Stephanie. Barack Obama took a break from promoting his own book to highlight 17 of the year's best . The Washington Post. 2021-02-22. 0190-8286.
  25. Web site: ALA Unveils 2021 Carnegie Medals Shortlist. 11 January 2021. American Libraries.
  26. Web site: Ayad Akhtar, Ben Ehrenreich among winners of American Book Awards. 2021-09-28. USA Today.
  27. Web site: 2021 Literary Awards. 2021-09-28. www.wisconsinlibraries.org.
  28. Web site: Andreeva. Nellie. 2021-07-09. Kumail Nanjiani To Headline & EP 'Homeland Elegies' Limited Series Adaptation In Works At FX. 2021-09-28. Deadline.