Review: Angel Down by Daniel Kraus, at Strange Horizons
Earlier this year, the literary and genre fiction communities were startled by the announcement that Daniel Kraus's Angel Down , a fantasy-horror novel in which a squad of WWI soldiers discover an angel on the killing fields of 1918 France, had won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction. This is not the first time that a novel in the fantastical genres had won this award—it is preceded by books like The Underground Railroad , A Visit from the Goon Squad , and The Road —but as I write at the beginning of my review of the book, published today at Strange Horizons , there are different kind of genre fiction, just as there are different kinds of literary fiction. I was surprised that the Pulitzer jury had the kind of genre fiction that Kraus writes on their radar, and even more surprised that the Pulitzer board, when offered a choice between Angel Down and more traditional nominees like Katie Kitamura' Audition and Torrey Peters's Stag Dance , would choose to recognize Kraus's n...