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2001 Argall (Seven Dreams #3)
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Nathan "N.R."
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Oct 28, 2012 10:31AM

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"The Stench of Corpses"
http://articles.latimes.com/2001/oct/...
Nathan "N.R." wrote: "One of my favorite Book Reviews. William the Blind reviews Argall for the LA Times:
"The Stench of Corpses"
http://articles.latimes.com/2001/oct/..."
Can't believe this is actually a thing! What a gas.
"The Stench of Corpses"
http://articles.latimes.com/2001/oct/..."
Can't believe this is actually a thing! What a gas.

EDIT: I get it now that I've read it. Haha. Very postmodern, William.
It gave me an internal chuckle or two, but it seems to lack a logical consistency. If 'William the Blind' is writing from the future, then why does he write in an 18th century-ish diction? Whatever. Shit like this is why Vollmann doesn't sell.

However, it does not even approach taking on this massive, complex, multi-faceted, mysterious and magickall work. Some issues to be discussed with readers of the Argall-text:
-The construction of the mock Elizabethan language, it's relation to Shakespeare and other contemporary writers, its subversion by Vollmann into something satiric, comical, but also deeply poetic and beautiful. I think William the Blind's Elizabethan rendering is the closest to a dream/night language (akin to a Finnegenean language-world) yet attained in the Seven Dreams.
-The manipulation of font style, size, appearance, etc. which greatly enhances the hermeneutic joy of experiencing Argall. The multiple spellings of place names, proper names (for example Argall, Argull, Argoll, Arkill, etc.), and even basic words are represented in a variety of spellings. The text becomes slippery and evasive and mercurial, changing and mutating before our very eyes as we read- difficult to hold, like images in a Dream...
-The massive endnotes and glossaries, which are endlessly fascinating, a pleasure to peruse, and reveal the depth Vollmann's research and deconstruction of the source texts.
-The time shifts at the end, the road signs, the ethical implications of this particular Symbolic history.
In my opinion this is the most immersive, strange, funny, violent, and Dream-like of the Seven Dreams. This is one hell of a complex and epic book, oceanic in ambition, dense and watery and windy, full of lunar light, forests and muck. I hope to engage some other Vollmannites and readers of Argall, or at least encourage others to give this book a read. There's nothing else like it out there that I've encountered (though I've heard parallels to Barth's Sot-Weed Factor and Pynchon's Mason and Dixon, but I haven't yet read either, so, perhaps someone else can jump in and illuminate things...)

I checked the Gr page for Argall & two other known names have read & reviewed it– I guess we'll just have to wait till our dear moderator finds the time to read it...& then we'll have some scintillating "brain-rattling" discussions.

I checked the Gr page for Argall & two other known names have read & reviewed..."
Yeah that's the chance you take when you read books nobody reads. I'm hoping some adventurous Goodreaders soon take up the task! The Brain Pain group is reading Vollmann right now, maybe I should head over there with my thoughts and questions...


Please do! Right now, the Week Four discussion of The Ice-Shirt consists only of the sound of crickets and melting ice...

by Georges T. Dodds
http://www.sfsite.com/10b/ar162.htm
"The introduction is a bit dense and heavy on convoluted and arcane philosophizing, being a sort of mission statement to the rest of the work, but once Vollman gets down to the business of telling the story, the prose gets easier and the story goes on apace." [I thought the intro gold ; and a bit of a come down when the story started up]
The Rain Taxi review by Jason Picone can also be endorsed ::
http://www.raintaxi.com/online/2001wi...
A positive blog post on Argall ::
http://mike.whybark.com/archives/0007...
An essay from The Pocahontas Archive, "The Naked Child Continues Her Somersaults: William T. Vollman's Representations of Pocahontas as Myth in Argall" by Devin Day ::
http://digital.lib.lehigh.edu/trial/p...


https://www.goodreads.com/topic/group...

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/group..."
Reminder, we're starting Argall next Monday over in the Brain Pain group. Schedule and info here:
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/group...

Especially the genre identification of the four-so-far Dreams :: "Finally, it occurred to me that each volume of Seven Dreams belongs to a different genre, each appropriate to the period it is set in: The Ice-Shirt is a saga, Fathers and Crows is a chronicle, Argall is a picaresque novel (really the only "proper" novel so far, which is probably why I found it the most accessible and easy to read of the bunch) and The Rifles is a travel/exploration diary."

Yes, this seems like it's getting toward the right thing to say about the Seven Dreams. Also that the narration or voice of each Dream shifts and fits well the particular genre... nice job Larou!

[book porn warning]
http://biblioklept.org/2016/02/19/why...
I'm not certain, but it may be my favorite Dream.


Have you seen his self review ?
http://articles.latimes.com/2001/oct/...

http://articles.latimes.com/2001/oct/... "
I have never seen this. Wow. The closest I have seen to Bill coming out and saying what he actually thinks about SD/The US of A (through satire of course)—really a departure from the Libertarian bent I see ascribed to him by a lot of readers/critics.

It purports to be a review written 100 years after Vollman's death, but was published in October 2001, less than a months after the September 11 events. I was struck by this phrase towards the conclusion of the review: "what would Vollmann have said about our obliteration of Iraq in 2003,"
Nathan "N.R." wrote: "One of my favorite Book Reviews. William the Blind reviews Argall for the LA Times:
"The Stench of Corpses"
http://articles.latimes.com/2001/oct/..."