2011 books

Jun. 14th, 2011 12:43 am
peteryoung: (Default)

15) Blake Butler, Scorch Atlas, 2009
Fourteen linked prose stories about the end of the world as we know it, but this is not a polite apocalypse after which there remains some kind of structure to life after the event. No, Butler's vision is to turn everything completely inside out with nothing left to grasp onto: weather, society, bodies, the mind, and especially families which most of the stories are structured around. However life does go on somehow, and Butler pushes the reader through one impossible event after another (eg. 'The Many Forms of Rain') with a variety of narrative voices that never question what is happening to them. It's an extraordinary and often jarring experiment, and as apocalypse fictions go this has to be a benchmark, something that will for a long time be hard to top.

2011 books

Jan. 23rd, 2011 07:01 pm
peteryoung: (Tao)


5) Fa Poonvoralak, The Most Silent School in the World, 2009
This came highly recommended from Marcel Barang, who also wrote the introduction to last year's English edition, describing it as "a literary UFO". Thailand isn't really on the map for wildly imaginative fiction, let alone science fiction and fantasy, so discovering something so unusual and category-defying was rather unexpected, particularly considering that this was also short-listed for the 2009 SEA Write Award. It's the story of eight schoolchildren of mixed ages at a riverside school in rural Thailand. They turn up when they want, night or day, there are no teachers, they play games with each other, not a great deal happens that's different from one day to the next, and they're not being groomed for a life in society. That's because in our plane of existence they're not really children at all: they're the eight Trigrams of Taoist cosmology, given English/Thai names like Water Nam, Mountain Pukao and Sky Fa. Then they are visited by eight more 'echo children' from the Moon who are all subtly different, then more children arrive from the rings of Saturn, the Oort Cloud, the Sun and various other places around the solar system. They speculate if their school may in fact be some kind of spaceship. They've finally multiplied to sixty-four – the same number of pairings that make up the Hexagrams of the I Ching – and the physical dimensions of their school keeps on growing, instantly adding more rooms as new children arrive. How they all interact may be meant to reflect the inherent subtleties of the I Ching's Hexagrams; although this seems to be the intent it was often difficult to figure out beyond the characters of the children/Trigrams themselves.

All the above is not actually a spoiler as it would have helped to know something of the structure of the book before beginning it. It's also rather inconclusive, but then this story was written more along ancient Eastern lines than that of a linear, modern Western text, with the analogy of the 'Silent School' probably meaning the life situations contained in the I Ching itself, and the physical school representing an expansion of an octagonal ba gua arrangement of Trigrams. This book is both perplexing and entertaining, and for someone who's long been interested in both creative fiction and the inner working of the I Ching it's also a rare and valuable find, regrettably one that I doubt will be showing up at many bookstores outside of Thailand.

2009 books

Apr. 26th, 2009 05:59 pm
peteryoung: (Valis)

17) Terence Bumbly, The Museum of Unnatural History, 2007
Australian author/illustrator David M. Henley has penned and illustrated the memoirs of Terence Bumbly, curator of a 25th century freak museum that mysteriously got burned down. Bumbly describes the many future genetic mutations that were created after all ethical constraints were removed (acceptable to him – "blessings rather than abominations" – a nightmare to us), and he goes on to describe the various other flights of warped science that were brought back heavily down to Earth. I picked this up in Galaxy Bookshop in Sydney a while ago and I've since discovered it now has its own facebook page. A wonderful, creepy, often funny and well written oddity that I would like to see go far.

2008 books

Jul. 24th, 2008 09:51 pm
peteryoung: (Default)


47) Bob Dylan, Tarantula, 1966
As self-indulgent as his sleeve notes to Highway 61 Revisited, this appeared as an underground press publication around 1965/66 though not as a book until 1971. Marginally 'beat lit' at least in its aspirations, as a stream-of-consciousness text it would make better sense if Dylan had given himself narrower parameters within which to work, and is only identifiably 'Dylanesque' because each chapter is capped with some pretty shaky urban poetry. Yes, he always was a better songwriter than poet. May make more sense when stoned.

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