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Bezoar Delinqxenz

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A techno-fiction novel on the uneasy desire for anti-rationalist ideas on the internet.

Taking off along the grotesque evolutionary curve of the internet, this novel by Mochu brings together Japanese otaku subcultures, Hindu mythology, darknet highways, ultraviolent cyberpunk forums, and renegade university departments to forge a transnational narrative that trips through the incompatible fantasies of rationality and civilization, with wormholes through ancient tales, recent cinema, plain-wrong art histories, and pirated philosophical reflections.

The novel opens with a case of abduction in India. The operations of a far-right publishing house are interrupted by extraterrestrial influences with political intent. The attack on a science-fiction writer at a beach in Goa seems connected to a bot-propelled puzzle revolving around the defacement of Medieval temple relics elsewhere. A detective specialized in interstellar sociology finds clues that point to a transgalactic anarchist group with ties to online Posadist forums, while Eurasian political theory circulates as noise-objects in Goa’s beachside clubs. Meanwhile, occultist explorers in the sci-fi writer’s story find that the legendary homeland for Hinduism in the Arctic has become infested by “Gradients of Hegelian Unhappiness” by way of an invasive subzero entity buried in deep snow. The detective’s investigations eventually turn metaphysical, settling on impossible solutions spanning the far reaches of outer space.

Reactionary behavior on the internet, having spawned numerous retroactive origin stories for itself, takes on a tentacular presence across diverse political spectrums, time periods, and cultural contexts, giving the impression of a vast and tangled entity with distributed intelligence. Fatally fused by a common hatred for the legacies of the Enlightenment, popular manifestations go by terms like “alt-right” and “neo-reaction,” powered by nerdy forums and blog posts across the web. Stationing conspiracy theory itself as the central form of thinking, acting, and concept-making in the twenty-first century, Bezoar Delinqxenz is a mixtape simulation of these entanglements at the borderlands of fiction, insanity, and political emancipation.

104 pages, Paperback

Published August 15, 2023

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Mochu

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Luke.
241 reviews8 followers
July 30, 2023
Look, i love experimental fiction and writing as much as the next person but there is some concession to coherency that needs to be made at some point in order for the book to be generally readable.
Profile Image for b.
615 reviews23 followers
November 20, 2024
I think if you’ve ever taken a theory course, or read Nick Land and that lot of assholes, you’ll be able to follow this. It’s not that impenetrable, nor schizo. Really you’d probably be better off coming in with some familiarity with Weird, Clark Ashton Smith and that lot. I think it’s not even that online, not in the way the people who recommended it to me said it was. Was having some big paranoid thoughts reading this and Tynion IV’s Department of Truth at the same time, and I’m sad to be finished up here. Really chewy, funny bits of language, less garbage word literature/litterature and all splatterature interface. Books that change after printing. Theory produced for vibes that does nothing for anyone. Madness. Love when people with wider art practices “come to” writing, and do something extremely conspicuous textually / with what words can do.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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