Tag Archives: The Rumpus

Downloading the Declaration

I had the pleasure of interviewing Damien Ober, author of Doctor Benjamin Franklin’s Dream America for The Rumpus. Readers of The Floating Library know that I thought very highly of this groundbreaking book. Here are a few words from my introduction to the interview:

When I first heard the concept for Damien Ober’s novelDoctor Benjamin Franklin’s Dream America—a series of vignettes about each signer of the Declaration of Independence at the moment of his death—I thought,Great concept, but how the hell is he going to pull that off?And that was before I learned that in Ober’s version of early America the main threat wasn’t the British, the Spanish, the French, or even the Native Americans—it was a deadly plague contracted through the Internet.

Yes, Doctor Benjamin Franklin’s Dream America is one of those experimental hybrids: part historical novel, part speculative mind-fuck. But after reading a few chapters I was hooked. Unlike many high concept novels, Dream America isn’t constantly winking at the reader. In fact, it doesn’t wink at all. Nor does it bury the reader in an avalanche of “bet you didn’t know this about our Founding Fathers” ephemera.

No, Dream America is a wildly imaginative, deftly plotted, gorgeously crafted novel with astute things to say about an America that might have been and an America we’re in danger of becoming.

Read the rest of the interview in The Rumpus