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Loading... Cartesian Sonata: And Other Novellasby William H. Gass
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I have finished the first novella, painfully so. I'm not a big fan of metafiction. I'm going to give a little time before I try again. The rating may change. ( )no reviews | add a review
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The other three novellas in this collection are equally high-concept: a traveling salesman falls in love with his hotel room and refuses to leave; an aging spinster literally loses herself in a line from an Elizabeth Bishop poem; a young boy inexplicably decides to live for revenge. The plots, such as they are, are offbeat enough to catch the interest--what holds it, however, is Gass at play in the fields of the word. Cartesian Sonata will not be to every reader's taste--those who are impatient with absurdity, non sequiturs, and pages and pages of verbal pyrotechnics may want to steer toward more conventional literature. Those who like their fiction liberally laced with equal measures of philosophy and anarchy, however, should give William H. Gass a try.
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:12 -0400)
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