I have a great idea for a drinking game. You take turns reading from "The Dawn in Erewhon", the last of the six stories in Tatlin! (and one that makes up half the book's length), and every time Guy Davenport uses the word "scrotum", everyone takes a drink. Participants will be well and truly hammered by the end, but they'll also likely be a little more cultured, having been exposed to various and sundry bits of information about Charles Fourier, Braque, Heraclitus, C.S. Pierce, Kierkegaard, Dutch culture, and theories of time in modern physics, along with colorfully rendered allusions to classical mythology and ancient civilizatons from China to Benin, from Ugarit to the Aztec Empire. So, yeah, there's a lot more to Davenport than his bizarre ball sack fixation. "The Dawn in Erewhon" oftentimes reads like the product of game of cadavre exquis played by Jorge Luis Borges, Ezra Pound, Robert Graves, Henry Miller, and Jean Genet. It can be as disjointed as that description sounds, and it's definitely the least successful work in the book. Each of the other five, much shorter stories, amazingly, packs in even more evidence of Davenport's erudition. We're talking pages overflowing with references to the history of art from cave paintings to cubism, with historical, philosophical, scientific, and literary personages of all stripes, and with enough Ancient Greeks, both historical and mythological, to fill the Acropolis ten times over. Sounds like a recipe for a pretentious mess, right? Well, every now and then it is, but for the most part the author manages to use this deluge of information to give a sense of immediate presence to the geographical and temporal expanses of cultural history, drawing connections and uncovering unexpected affinities across decades, centuries, and millenia. These stories are the polar opposite of, say, the insular minimalism of Samuel Beckett's late prose works. They open out to the ocean of accumulated human intellectual endeavor. Davenport quite consciously stands on the shoulders of giants, but I'll be damned if he doesn't seem to know their every fee, fi, fo, and fum.