Most of the reaction is overblown, as Nick has pointed out. <div><br></div><div>However, I'm currently 100 pages into "Home Fires," and I must say that the "sharia law--only in the EU" line punched me in the gut. It made me start asking myself which particular pundits Wolfe has been reading. As somebody who grew up in a very monoethnic fundamentalist Christian milieu, who now has several Middle Eastern friends, I have been finding myself forced into the role of the "defender of Islam" all too often lately out of basic frustration over some of the bald-faced generalizations and lies that get peddled as fact, and Europe's Islamic future is a meme that keeps coming up in discussions. Maybe it's just personal experience making me oversensitive. </div>
<div><br></div><div>I don't want to inflame anything, as I recognize that Wolfe may indeed have a larger proportion of right-leaning fans than, say, China Mieville or Richard Morgan (or...Neil Gaiman?), and of course his writings display enormous nuance. I think Wolfe's writing is stellar enough to appeal to readers of all political stances. Still, I wonder if any literary scholar has ever undertaken a Said-influenced "Orientalist" critique of something like "Seven American Nights"?</div>