Alexander Zelenyj is a Canadian author of speculative fiction. He is known for his seamless merging of genres in his stories, resulting in a visionary, original and difficult-to-define style. All of his fiction has literary underpinnings, though his work is infused with genre elements running the gamut from magical realism, horror, science fiction, noir, historical, western, Bizarro, to surrealism. For this reason the term "slipstream" has often been used to describe his work, though some reviewers consider the term inadequate to define Zelenyj's unclassifiable style.
Style
Thematically, Zelenyj's fiction often explores the darker side of the human condition. His stories are known for being emotionally harrowing, with elements of the surreal and bizarre interwoven among their plots. This emotional impact often has a distinctly melancholy character, with violence, depression, and suicide being recurring themes. The Canadian landscape figures prominently in much of Zelenyj's work, specifically his home city of Windsor, Ontario and its surrounding environs. More generally, the city is often portrayed as a sinister and immoral place, and is frequently juxtaposed against the natural peace and beauty of rustic settings. A historical element recurs throughout his fiction, with a focus on war and its effects on both those serving in the military as well as the family members of soldiers. Zelenyj's stories have examined both World Wars, the Vietnam War, colonial struggles in the American West, and Medieval-period conflict, among others. Religious themes resonate through his fiction, particularly in the stories of Songs For The Lost, which depicts fringe spirituality in the form of organized suicide cults and individuals seeking spiritual escape from the trauma of their lives. Themes of apocalypse and post-apocalypse recur in his fiction. The dark quality inherent in much of Zelenyj's work gives it an apocalyptic tone even in those stories not dealing explicitly with end of the world scenarios. Zelenyj's prose style has been described as burnished and literary, drawing comparisons to the workof authors such as Ray Bradbury, Richard Matheson, and Gabriel Garcia Marquez, as well as more contemporary slipstream authors such as Michael Cisco and D.P. Watt. Some of his recent work is more streamlined in nature. Zelenyj's short story collections are known for their massive length, the eclectic variety of literary genres and styles represented, their often dark and melancholy subject matter, and for their thematic cohesion and inter-story links.