Neha Patil (Editor)

Towing Jehovah

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Author
  
James K. Morrow

Awards
  
World Fantasy Award—Novel

3.9/5
Goodreads

Originally published
  
1994

Followed by
  
Blameless in Abaddon

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Genres
  
Fantasy, Speculative fiction

Nominations
  
Nebula Award for Best Novel

Similar
  
James K Morrow books, World Fantasy Award—Novel winners, Fantasy books

Just a suggestion towing jehovah


Towing Jehovah is a 1994 fantasy novel by James K. Morrow, published by Harcourt Brace. The book is about the death of God and the subsequent towing of his body across the Atlantic Ocean. In 1995 it received the World Fantasy Award for best novel, with two additional best novel awards. It was followed by two sequels in 1996, and 1999.

Contents

Synopsis

God is dead, and now God's two-mile-long cadaver is floating in the Atlantic Ocean, just off the coast of Africa. As a result, the archangel Raphael hires supertanker captain Anthony Van Horne to tow the cadaver into the Arctic, with the intention of having it be preserved by the cold.

Reception

Towing won the 1995 World Fantasy Award for best novel, and was nominated for the 1995 Hugo Award for Best Novel and the 1995 Nebula Award for Best Novel, shortlisted for the 1995 Arthur C. Clarke Award, and ranked second for the 1995 Locus Award for Best Fantasy Novel. As well, the French translation, Remorquant Jehovah, won the 1996 Grand Prix de l'Imaginaire for best foreign-language novel.

Jo Walton has described it as "brilliant but weird", and "terrific", while Steven H Silver has called it "interesting" and "intriguing", and commended Morrow's skill as a religious satirist, but criticized him for the quality of his satires of non-religious topics, saying that "[w]hen he turns his attention to satirizing other aspects of society, [Morrow] tends to fling his darts at random."

The Chicago Tribune praised Morrow for his "light-handed sense of satire", and said that "(Towing Jehovah's) title alone is enough to send your imagination racing off into the cosmos." The Los Angeles Times compared it to the works of Kurt Vonnegut, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, William Shakespeare, and Cecil B. DeMille, but stated that the novel was "buoyant" for the same reason that it is "ultimately, a little disappointing": namely, "Morrow doesn't care as much [as Vonnegut]".

Sequels

A sequel, Blameless in Abaddon, was published in 1996, and a second sequel, The Eternal Footman, was published in 1999.

References

Towing Jehovah Wikipedia