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Blog Archive
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2012
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January
(25)
- Throne of The Crescent Moon by Saladin Ahmed (Revi...
- Thoughts on Alain Robbe-Grillet's "Recollections o...
- "Blue Remembered Earth" by Alastair Reynolds (Revi...
- Dominion by C.S. Friedman (Reviewed by Mihir Wanchoo)
- "Stories from The Quiet War" by Paul McAuley (Revi...
- James Rollins News and Author Interview (By Mihir ...
- Shadow Ops: Control Point by Myke Cole (Reviewed b...
- 2011 BSFA Shortlist with Comments (by Liviu Suciu)
- "In the Mouth of the Whale" by Paul McAuley (Revie...
- Strata by Bradley P. Beaulieu and Stephen Gaskell ...
- Two More 2012 Upcoming Titles, Karen Thompson Walk...
- Blue Fall by B.B. Griffith (Reviewed by Mihir Wanc...
- Dead Eye: Pennies for the Ferryman & Dead Eye: The...
- "In the Lion's Mouth" by Michael Flynn (Reviewed b...
- On Some Recent Reviews (by Liviu Suciu)
- Thoughts on Two Series Ending Novels: "The Daemon ...
- "The Fiend and the Forge: Book Three of The Tapest...
- Prequel and Sequel Novella News (By Mihir Wanchoo)
- Mihir's Top Reads of 2011
- Imperium by Nicholas Olivo w/ Bonus review of Kram...
- BLOG TOUR: “Pantheons” by E.J. Dabel
- News about the Demon Cycle saga by Peter V. Brett ...
- A Quick Take on 3 Recent Orbit Books, Lilith Saint...
- Spotlight on January Books
- Happy New Year 2012!
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January
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Thoughts on Alain Robbe-Grillet's "Recollections of the Golden Triangle" and "Repetition" (by Liviu Suciu)
For this reason his novels while tending to assume the structure of thrillers and mysteries, are in effect quite close to speculative fiction and in a few cases I would argue that they are sff-nal by any reasonable definition.
While I have almost all of his novels that have been translated into English and a few like Regicide that are French only and I fully read some four as of now, I also read quite a lot from a few others and I plan to read carefully all his oeuvre as time goes. Here I will present the two most impressive (imho) of Alain Robbe-Grillet's novels I've finished so far.
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"A provocative novel by the most influential living French writer, Recollections of the Golden Triangle is a tour de force: a literary thriller constructed of wildly diverse elements--fantasy and dream, erotic invention, and the stuff of popular fiction and movies taken to its farthest limits.
A secret door that is opened slightly by an electronic device, a beautiful hanged factory girl, a pale young aristocrat whose blood apparently nourishes his vampiric lover, the evil Dr. Morgan who conducts his experiments in "tertiary dream behavior," the beautiful and sinister women from the world of horror films, and the investigating police, who are not all what they seem to be, are just some of the ingredients of this intriguing new novel by the French master of the intellectual thriller, whose novels and films have effectively changed the way we can look at the "real" world today.
Recollections of the Golden Triangle challenges the reader to find his own meaning in its descriptions, clues, and contradictions, and to play detective by assembling the pieces of the fictional puzzle"
Recollections of the Golden Triangle is a haunting and visual book that just throws at you unforgettable imagery and quite a lot of scenes from the novel stuck with me for a long time. If you want a mind bender which is short but offers more than novels three times its size, this one is highly recommended. Try opening it and see if it mesmerizes you - the Amazon listing linked above too has a few pages excerpt and I grabbed a picture of the first two paragraphs of the book from there.
Repetition is on its face a classical Cold War thriller as the blurb above indicates, but in reality the action is so over the top and the imagery so haunting and outlandish that the book is as close to sff as it gets, while standing withing accepted historical facts. This is a superb novel but one that is not for everyone with its hallucinatory prose, uncertain and shifting identities and themes of incest, forbidden love, s&m, Lolita... all taking places in the ruins of Germany in 1949.
Everyone encountered is not quite whom he or she seems but the main characters - our "hero" HR aka Henri Robin aka many other names - his seeming double (identity and role to be revealed later), his "handler", the older German officer that is a target of assassination and the mysterious mother and daughter pair of the American zone in Berlin whose past and relationships with the main characters above is also slowly revealed give this novel its power in addition to the superb prose.
Highly recommended and another novel that needs to be read at least twice since early happenings change or deepen their sense after later revelations so the second reading will be quite different than the first. Also in a contrast with Recollections of the Golden Triangle and showing the author's literary range, this novel starts slower and then accelerates in the second part to end in a pretty decisive, no controversy about what's what, finale.
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