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Zazen (2011)

by Vanessa Veselka

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
2761496,915 (3.84)10
From the author of the National Book Award longlisted epic The Great Offshore Grounds, here is the debut novel that launched her career-a story of activism, police violence, and white guilt in a not so distant dystopian America. "An ambitious encapsulation of our modern times, Zazen tackles counterculture hipsters, geology, Buddhism, consumerism, terrorism, veganism, family drama, and, above all, love." -Judges' Citation, PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize The world is on fire, and Della doesn't know what, if anything, she should do about it. The country is poised on the brink of war. Curfews and other restrictions give the police an excuse for violence. Customers at the vaguely vegan cafe where Della is working after dropping out of grad school debate which foreign countries are the best to flee to- Costa Rica? Bali? Della's parents-former revolutionaries-are more excited at the idea of her brother and his Black wife giving them biracial grandbabies than in engaging in any new actions; her nominally activist coworkers are mostly devoted to planning a massive sex party. Della floats between them, lost and numb. Then a bomb goes off- some shallow place of capitalistic worship demolished. Inspired, for reasons not entirely clear to herself, Della calls in a second-fake-bomb threat. But a bomb goes off there, too, and soon Della finds herself pulled in by a group of people who, for once, are promising to actually do something. No matter the consequences. Prescient when it was first published, Vanessa Veselka's debut novel is even more revolutionary now. A VINTAGE ORIGINAL.… (more)
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Showing 1-5 of 14 (next | show all)
Capsule review from first read, 25 Jan 2012, edited to add link to Kris's review:

A fantastic debut that makes me less worried about the future of fiction. This is a book like no other, and Veselka's prose is raw, poetic, gritty, and tapped in to social anxieties and political unrest in almost prophetic ways.

Kris's review is well worth reading, so I will direct you there. ( )
  proustitute | Apr 2, 2023 |
This novel is set in a police state, presumably the United States, fraught with terrorists and attendant harsh anti-terrorist measures. It begins as a sardonic yet somehow affectionate romp through the contemporary counterculture of wokesters and hipsters as seen through the eyes of a disaffected employee of a vegan restaurant. About halfway through the book, the emphasis shifts to a group of monkeywrenchers (or terrorists, if you will) as they lay plans to strike a major blow against society. I enjoyed the first part of the book more; though the plot thickens and twists nicely into thriller territory, the author also introduces a myriad of new characters who aren't very well developed and whom I found difficult to differentiate. The already substantial vocabulary load from the restaurant of the weird glop the rising generation likes to eat and drink is augmented by an order of magnitude by geological and explosives arcana. And I hope she knows more about geology and explosives than she does about astronomy; she has her protagonists blissing out at the sublimity of the constellation Capricornus--I hope they had a really good telescope, assuming that they're in the Northern Hemisphere--and looking upward at two o'clock in the morning and seeing a 'thin moon', an impossibility. The author is a considerable wordsmith; almost every page has a striking insight or turn of phrase, but Edward Abbey did the second half of this book much better two generations ago. ( )
  Big_Bang_Gorilla | Feb 25, 2022 |
Manjula Martin rec
  wordloversf | Aug 14, 2021 |
As I was reading Zazen, I was continually reminded of something Joshua Ferris said in his review of Don DeLillo's Zero K. To paraphrase: You don't read DeLillo for the plot. You read him for the sentences.

I often felt that way about Veselka, although I did enjoy the plot. The book opens with one of the more humorous/disturbing/poignant meditations I'd read in a while, involving self-immolation and fortune cookies. Without giving anything away, I was impressed with how that theme/motif was developed throughout the book.

Relatively early in the book, a character is planning to move to an Indian village, and the narrator says to herself, "Because the search for authenticity is a well without a bottom." For this narrator, that search is undertaken in the context of late-stage capitalism, and I can understand how certain readers who are fans of late-stage capitalism might find this a bit of a sticking point.

However, regardless of your sociopolitical orientation, if you can't find joy in such lines as "'Cultural obsolescence impeding the fresh flow of commerce,' I told the police operator, 'that's why we blew up the dog track,'" then I just couldn't have a beer with you.



( )
1 vote G-Bot | Sep 5, 2018 |
This novel deserves more attention. It's intriguing both in style and content without being difficult. Try it! ( )
  SonjaYoerg | Oct 1, 2014 |
Showing 1-5 of 14 (next | show all)
What separates this novel is the way Veselka honors the complexity of a young, intelligent generation at once confused and overwhelmed, but willing to enact change. Della’s strength is her individuality, yet she understands that in order to create change, no matter how small, she must choose to join.
added by DorsVenabili | editKROnline, Patrick Dacey (Feb 12, 2016)
 
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Epigraph
War A is going well and no longer a threat, small and mature. Like a Bonsai. War B is in full flower. Its thin green shoots reaching across the ocean floor like fiber optic cable. The TVs are on all the time now. The lights dim and everyone moves in amber. They flicker like votives. That's what we will be one day, insects in sap, strange jewels.
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This novel is really for Violet Veselka
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I went to work and I guy I wait on said he was leaving.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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From the author of the National Book Award longlisted epic The Great Offshore Grounds, here is the debut novel that launched her career-a story of activism, police violence, and white guilt in a not so distant dystopian America. "An ambitious encapsulation of our modern times, Zazen tackles counterculture hipsters, geology, Buddhism, consumerism, terrorism, veganism, family drama, and, above all, love." -Judges' Citation, PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize The world is on fire, and Della doesn't know what, if anything, she should do about it. The country is poised on the brink of war. Curfews and other restrictions give the police an excuse for violence. Customers at the vaguely vegan cafe where Della is working after dropping out of grad school debate which foreign countries are the best to flee to- Costa Rica? Bali? Della's parents-former revolutionaries-are more excited at the idea of her brother and his Black wife giving them biracial grandbabies than in engaging in any new actions; her nominally activist coworkers are mostly devoted to planning a massive sex party. Della floats between them, lost and numb. Then a bomb goes off- some shallow place of capitalistic worship demolished. Inspired, for reasons not entirely clear to herself, Della calls in a second-fake-bomb threat. But a bomb goes off there, too, and soon Della finds herself pulled in by a group of people who, for once, are promising to actually do something. No matter the consequences. Prescient when it was first published, Vanessa Veselka's debut novel is even more revolutionary now. A VINTAGE ORIGINAL.

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