Friday, August 7, 2020

3 Books to Read If You Liked THE AMERICANS

3 Books to Read If You Liked THE AMERICANS As of last week, The Americans is overat least for a few months. The FX series, which premiered in January, tells the story of a pair of KGB agents trained to live as ordinary Americans while performing missions to undermine the United States during the late Cold War. In addition to showing us a (homicidal) side of Keri Russell that Felicity never offered, the series is a surprisingly effective amalgam of suspenseful spy tale and domestic drama. But the first season is over, and Elizabeth and Philip have slithered back into hiding. So what is a bookish fan to do? Well, you could give these books a shot (to be clear, I mean you should try them, not stab them with a syringe full of paralytic poison): The Charm School  by Nelson DeMille This ones obvious, but that doesnt mean its not an excellent choice. In The Americans, we heard snippets of conversation about the mysterious Center that handled Elizabeth and Philip, and we saw occasional flashbacks to their training. This 1988 thriller goes much further into the training. Classic DeMille in his spy mode, the novel begins with a cool settingthe camp where the Soviet Union has been using kidnapped Americans to train soon-to-be undercover KGB operativesbefore blowing it up (figurativelymostly) with a team of plucky American spies. The Charm School lacks the humane complexity that made The Americans so surprisingly good. (You wont find DeMilles characters sitting down to an awkward family dinner.) But its certainly damned fun, and a nice distraction while we wait for the more complicated world of The Americans to return. Within the Context of No Context by George W. S. Trow Fun in a very different, much weirder way, Within the Context of No Context  is a lovely, disorienting manifesto about American mass culture at the very moment The Americans depicts. (The book version also includes a more personal, introductory essay, as well.) Published originally in the New Yorker in 1980, Within is a bracing critique of the effects of television on American life. Television is the force of no-history, and it holds the archives of the history of no-history, Trow writes early on. Television is a mystery. This might seem an idiosyncratic choice as a followup to a spy show. And I suppose it is. But what better way to understand and explore a television show about the early 1980s than a book on television from the early 1980s? Its meta-tastic! Seriously, though, reading Within in the wake of The Americans gives you a chance to explore the historical context the show depicts while at the same time giving you an opportunity to reflect on the way television has shaped all of our lives, for good and, perhaps especially, for ill.   Anthropology of an American Girl by Hilary Thayer Hamann For my money, one of the most interesting aspects of The Americans was the full-fledged character the show created for Elizabeth and Philips teenage daughter, Paige. (It appears to have taken a page, so to speak, from another secret-espionage show, Homeland, which also centrally features a complex adolescent girl character.) Even amidst the murderous geopolitics of the Cold War, the show takes Paiges feelings and needs and choices, as small-scale and intimate as they usually are, very seriously. Judging by the final moments of the season finale, Paiges role may only be getting bigger, so it makes sense to try to get inside her head a bit during the break. The hugely acclaimed Anthropology of an American Girl also offers a portrait of a teenage girl at the beginning of the 1980s. Hamanns protagonist, Eveline, isnt Paige, of course. Shes a few years older, at 17, and her experiences are darker. (Shes raped, for example, rather than maybe-almost-raped, like Paige.) By all accounts sharp ly observed, Hamanns book offers a world of possibilities The Americans cant quite manage, since I guess it does need to deal with all the spy stuff, too. And, at nearly 600 pages,  it might fill some time until The Americans comes back. _________________________ Sign up for our newsletter to have the best of Book Riot delivered straight to your inbox every two weeks. No spam. We promise. To keep up with Book Riot on a daily basis, follow us on Twitter or like us on Facebook. So much bookish goodnessall day, every day. Sign up to Unusual Suspects to receive news and recommendations for mystery/thriller readers. Thank you for signing up! Keep an eye on your inbox.

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