21st Century Literature discussion
11/24 Huck Out West
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11/24 Huck Out West- background and non-spoiler content
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Longtime Coover fan here ever since a literature professor introduced me to Pricksongs and Descants back in the mid- to late-90s. Would like to join you all, but my reading has been behind by weeks to months this entire year, so we'll see...
The electronic book review did a really nice discussion called "Remembering Robert Coover" made up of writers, former students, etc., interspersed with some of Coover's own thoughts/presentations:
https://electronicbookreview.com/essa...
The electronic book review did a really nice discussion called "Remembering Robert Coover" made up of writers, former students, etc., interspersed with some of Coover's own thoughts/presentations:
https://electronicbookreview.com/essa...

Sam, I certainly had no idea about it. Very interesting, and good to know as I start this novel, thanks!

I agree Greg. The savagery in the book is extreme. Coover was a 20th century author and his approach is very much a 20th century approach. Compare this book to Little Big Man. The author is over eighty years old when writing this and I don't feel the approach is as acceptable as in 1964 when Berger wrote that novel. But in his exaggeration, I think Coover's intent is to mock the savagery and prejudices that were existent in the genre. Unfortunately, IMO, this would have worked much better in the 1960s and 1970's when this approach was still fresh and real life Vietnam war violence gave the satire more bite.

Completely agree with this Sam . . . and also perhaps to mock the unspoken savagery in the social norms of Twain's time (as well as even perhaps the savagery inherent at the roots of our Western tradition as a whole?).
Not sure how I feel yet as to whether his approach is successful or not, but I do get what you mean by it being 20th century at heart. I will think deeper on all of that after I finish.
Cleaning out my e-mails and there was one that linked to a few older articles by Coover, so I'll post links in case they are of interest to anyone else:
- The End of Books
https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytim...
- Cave Writing: New Adventures in Mot-Town (about the impact of technology on books/writing)
https://www.cccb.org/rcs_gene/robert_...
- In Answer to the Question: Why Do You Write?
https://www.persee.fr/doc/rfea_0397-7...
- The End of Books
https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytim...
- Cave Writing: New Adventures in Mot-Town (about the impact of technology on books/writing)
https://www.cccb.org/rcs_gene/robert_...
- In Answer to the Question: Why Do You Write?
https://www.persee.fr/doc/rfea_0397-7...

- The End of Books
https://archive.nytimes...."
Thanks Marc. I was familiar with Coover experiments in hypertext, group text ect. The last piece of poetry, "Why I Write" was wonderful.
Books mentioned in this topic
Little Big Man (other topics)The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (other topics)
Pricksongs and Descants (other topics)
Huck Out West (other topics)
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (other topics)
More...
The novel Huck Out West is a wildcard selection nominated as a literary example from the American western genre. It is pays homage to Mark Twain's
satire of Twain's flaws and the western in general.
Many don't realize that Twain attempted but did not finish a western sequel to Huck Finn and it is included in
https://books.google.com/books?id=6hu...
The fragment is short and is what prompted Coover's novel.