T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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133.1 | | XANADU::SORNSON | | Sun Sep 09 1984 01:27 | 8 |
| Don't bother. It doesn't get any better. The more you read, the less story
you'll find. I tried to read Dhalgren several years ago, and ended up actually
throwing the book away. (It wasn't worth giving to someone.) I've read a
couple of other Delany books (whose titles escape me at the moment) that weren't
too bad, though. Perhaps Delaney was trying to make a statement with this book.
(Whatever it was, he could have used ~500 fewer pages.)
/mark sornson
|
133.2 | | SUPER::KENAH | | Mon Sep 10 1984 09:02 | 7 |
| Dhalgren is one of the few books I never finished. I just couldn't find it
in myself to read the last 150 pages. I kept hoping for something to
happen, but -- nothing.
I much preferred Delaney's "Babel-17".
andrew
|
133.3 | | REX::POWERS | | Mon Sep 10 1984 10:23 | 21 |
| I finished it, and I was quite surprised(?) disappointed(?) shocked(?)
<don't really know what word to use; the rest of the book kind of numbs
you to some extent> at the lack of conclusion.
A "hard sf" writer like Clarke, Niven, Hogan, wouldn't get a way with
so little explanation about the condition of the city.
Delany didn't even resort to deus ex machina, he just ignored any resolution
at all.
I can't say I'm glad I read it, but the experience it represented has had some
effect (the foremost effect is that I'll be VERY careful when I pick up
another Delaney; the last previous Delany I had read was Triton, which has
essentially the same lack of resolution, leaving depressed, depraved
characters hanging off the edge - two in row was too much).
I ocassionally find myself thinking about the book, not so much to think
about what did Delaney mean, but what could he have possibly have meant?
It's a high effort book to read, long and with those parallel journal tracks.
It's a low reward book if you're looking for SCIENCE fiction, but a real
thought provoker. Go in with the right expectations, and some might
even call it a "tour de force."
- tom]
|
133.4 | | KOALA::BURR | | Tue Sep 11 1984 19:27 | 28 |
| While it took me about three tries to get started on DHALGREN, I finally
read the entire book once I managed to get past the first 50 pages or so. It
seemed to me that the book as a whole was not really successful and really
lacked a substantial plot, the writing was quite powerful. I was glad I read
DHALGREN, and probably consider it Delany's best writing to date, but not
his most successful book considered as a whole. DHALGREN was the first novel
Delany published after a gap of 3-4 years and struck me as a book written
to get something out of his system or resolve some point in his mind.
TRITON appeared relatively shortly after DHALGREN, and while sharing some
similarities in style with it, is much less powerful but has a better
developed plot. TRITON is intended as an allegory for the development of
Science Fiction from the hard science, adventure tales of the 30's and 40's
to the New Wave experiments of the 60's, and its final conclusion seems to
be that neither was truly successful, which should perhaps be taken as the
author's own opinion on the subject.
Delany's writings since DHALGREN and TRITON, NEVARYON TALES and NEVARYONIA
(I'm not sure on the spelling) seem a bit more "tame" in style and closer to
his older writings (pre-DHALGREN), but still don't necessarily feel
obligated to provide a fully developed and resolved plot.
As far as finishing DHALGREN goes, my recommendation is to do so if you are
enjoying the writing, and not to do so if what you are primarily interested
in is plot or character resolution.
Rod Burr
|
133.5 | | RAINBW::STRATTON | | Fri Sep 14 1984 22:15 | 8 |
| Thanks to all who replied. I also got a phone call from an old friend I hadn't
talked to in a few years - that was great!
I've put the book back on the shelf. The next book is John Brunner's _Stand
on Zanzibar_...
Jim Stratton
|
133.6 | | AUSSIE::UNDERWOOD | | Tue Oct 02 1984 07:03 | 5 |
| Its a late answer; I agree with all the above. I read it maybe
10 years ago and failed to understand it, but images from it
often come back to me. So I say that it is worthwhile, although
I will have trouble ever starting another Delany book.
Matt
|
133.7 | | WEBSTR::BEYER | | Fri Aug 16 1985 15:59 | 19 |
| This is the first note on Delany I found so I'm moving a rathole from 236
here.
'Empire Star' was very normal for the first three quarters. Then Delany
takes half a bottle of quaaludes, or the top of his paper curls over and
feeds back into his typewriter, or both, and the last section is a bunch
of half-sentences that don't make much sense, except perhaps in a semiotic
kind of way.
'Nova' had a plot all the way through. It had a lot of subplots, but it
did have a plot. I agree with you about his ideas though, particularly the
one about plugging in to machines to make them work. That's the kind of
thing that keeps me reading him.
If you quit 50 pages into 'Triton' you got the good part. Delaney keeps
getting this notion that he should be 'relevant' or something, which causes
his worst disasters.
HRB
|
133.8 | In Defense of Dhalgren | MIRFAK::TILLSON | | Thu Jul 24 1986 14:05 | 28 |
|
I know this a _real_ late reply to this note, but I just signed
in to this conference. And Delany is my *FAVORITE* SF author, so...
I have to disagree about Dhalgren, naturally. I picked it up and
read it in a day. (Needless to say, I didn't do much else that day.)
I really enjoyed it, but I guess I can understand why most people
didn't like it. Delany is a linguist, a post-structuralist to be
precise. His works tend to reflect his latest meanderings in
linguistics. If you are looking for traditional science fiction,
you will not find it in any of Delany's work. If you are looking
for nifty endings, you will not find them. Delany's novels do not
have endings. That's right, none. That is part of the point of
his writing style; the stories are for the telling of stories, not
for the fabrications of pat endings. Dhalgren (for those of you
who didn't make it to the end) not only did not end, but the last
chapter cycled right around to the beginning of the book (it was
*nearly* identical to the first chapter...)! James Joyce used the
same technique for the beginning/ending of Ulysses.
If you enjoy experimental writing styles, heavy symbolism, and prose
that borders on poetry, AND are not angered by stories that have
no endings (and what stories in real life actually end?) then give
Dhalgren a try.
Rita
|
133.9 | a long the riverrun past etc. | CGHUB::CONNELLY | Eye Dr3 - Regnad Kcin | Thu Jul 24 1986 23:27 | 19 |
| re: .8 (cyclical books)
> *nearly* identical to the first chapter...)! James Joyce used the
> same technique for the beginning/ending of Ulysses.
Hmm...wasn't that "Finnegans Wake"? (i had to cheat and read the
last page on that one--"Ulysses" i remember as readable by comparison)
There are a couple of science fiction/fantasy books that use the same
technique. Seems to me "Silverlock" sort of fit that class. Then
there are "helical" ones (time/dimensional travel involved) where the
protagonist ends up becoming a character he/she met on page 1.
The (old) New Wave author Robbe-Grillet had a book called "Maison de
Rendezvous" where scenes kept dissolving into other (archetypal?) scenes
that had already taken place one or more times. The effect was kind of
like being stuck in one of those dreams you keep thinking you woke up
from but didn't.
(But my favorite Delany was "Jewels of Aptor", so whaddo i know?)
|
133.10 | I thought NOVA had an ending.?.?.? | TROLL::RUDMAN | | Fri Jul 25 1986 01:25 | 3 |
| Ahhh; I see. Like Comet Jo...
Don
|
133.11 | | GAYNES::WALL | I see the middle kingdom... | Fri Jul 25 1986 09:29 | 9 |
|
re: .10
Now THAT was an obscure reference ... or did you realize you were
making it?
(Triton had an ending, too)
Dave W.
|
133.12 | "Endings should be inconclusive" | NRLABS::MACNEAL | Big Mac | Fri Jul 25 1986 14:58 | 6 |
| I just finished The Einstein Intersection, the first book I have ever
read by Delany. All I can say is "Wow!". He certainly does have a way
with words, and he is probably the first storyteller (in the true sense
of the word) that made me think. I missed out on some of his
references (mostly the modern day ones, my mythology is pretty good).
I'm going to try to look up a couple of his other works.
|
133.13 | | TROLL::RUDMAN | | Mon Jul 28 1986 13:26 | 11 |
| Re: .11
Of course. Most meaning for minimum words.
Re: .12
If you start reading Delany, THE EINSTEIN INTERSECTION is a good
one to start with. (NOVA, incidentally, is better off read as the
short story "House Afire".)
Don
|
133.14 | Mea Culpa | MIRFAK::TILLSON | | Mon Jul 28 1986 14:50 | 25 |
|
re. 8
(gulp) you're absolutely right - it was Finnegan's Wake.
I haven't read either Silverlock or Robbe-Grillet's "Maison de
Rendezvous, but I will now! Thanks for the pointers!
As for some of Delany's works having endings, I will go (when I
get some time to do it) and look up the ones that were mentioned,
and see why it was that I felt they didn't end. (I do remember
thinking that at the time.) Will let you know what I conclude;
it's been a while since I read them.
re: Jewels of Aptor: I liked that, too. The first Delany I read
was Neveryona. I liked it very much, and went back and read all
of Delany's work in the order that he wrote them, starting with
the trilogy that contains Jewels of Aptor. If you like SRD and
have a few weeks to spare, this is a nifty way to read him. The
development of his writing style over time becomes pretty clear,
and makes the later, more obscure books much easier to understand.
Rita
|
133.15 | Never Too Late! | BMT::MENDES | Richard | Fri May 01 1987 23:36 | 13 |
| I only recently started reading this NOTES file. This is a pretty old
note, but I can't resist adding one more downwardly directed digit
(thumb) on the subject of Dhalgren. I couldn't finish it. It
im(de?)pressed me as someone's drug-induced pretensions to literature,
and presumably the publisher was smoking the same brand of weed.
My wife, Ruth, managed to plow through to the end. She still can't
figure out why she bothered...
Otherwise, Delaney could be great. I'll never know. After Dhalgren, I
have no desire whatsoever to pick up anything else by him.
- Richard
|
133.16 | Never Too Early | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | | Mon May 04 1987 13:54 | 5 |
| Some earlier Delaney is very different albeit still spacey. I enjoyed
The Jewels of Aptor and The Einstein Intersection.
len.
|
133.17 | Or did I... | ICEMAN::RUDMAN | Biologically loyal. | Thu May 07 1987 14:03 | 4 |
| Not to mention NOVA (a stretched out "House Afire), EMPIRE STAR,
and THE FALL OF THE TOWERS trilogy.
Don
|
133.18 | awesome | KAOA08::FIELD | Count Zero Interrupt | Fri Jul 10 1987 16:57 | 14 |
| I must give the thumbs up....yes, I "plowed" through Dhalgren,
not once, but three times in the last eight years.
It is not a book that can be ripped to pieces in a high school
grammar class, but more of an exploration into experimental literature.
Ithink he did a fine job at what he was trying to create; a piece
of life on paper.
A note for those who wish to read it, pick it up, and read it.
Don't put it down. When you are finished you will either hate it
or you will have lived somewhere else for several hours (days).
Try it - you may like it, and thats what counts....Charlie
|
133.19 | From a five-time reader | BMT::DAVIS | Ray Davis | Sun Jan 10 1988 21:15 | 24 |
| I've heard all kinds of theories on _Dhalgren_ - my pet one ties
into the obvious interest Delany has in the literary philosphers
who've come outa that wacky France in the last 20 years.
_Dhalgren_ is science fiction about the science of fiction -
the Kid is kicked around by being stuck into the (then most current)
limits of critical speculation the same way that space travellers
are kicked around by the latest speculations on physics. Barthes
and Derrida love to focus in on the tears inherent in the most
carefully structured of texts - Barthes, in particular, points out
the fascination of the "unnatural" peaks in "naturalistic" fiction.
Bellona is a fictional city which suffers from the combined ills
and thrills of a '70s city, a hippy wetdream, and the fact that
it only exists in a book. The fact that the Kid only lives within
a text explains most of his problems - unless you go down to the
Robbe-Grillet level, a novel has to skip over _some_ time _somewhere_
(the Kid's memory gaps); a novel has to be given structure (the
itchy feeling of being controlled and deja vu); a Delany novel has
to have certain signatures (the inadequately explained one bare
foot, the move from artist to criminal)...
The trouble sf readers have with Delany is not recognizing the s, I
think.
|
133.20 | Can't say I *enjoyed* it, but I remember it | RSTS32::KASPER | This note contains exactly ---> | Mon Jan 11 1988 11:27 | 11 |
| I read this about 5 years ago, after listening to 2 co-workers argue
over whether it was the worst or best book ever written. I did finish
it, and found it interesting, but I think I would've hated it if I
hadn't been warned that it had no resolution/explanation.
I find it interesting that I kept waffling between trying to figure out
a coherent explanation and being sure there couldn't be one. This book
pushed me to examine the lines between reality, fantasy, and nonsense.
Very surrealistic.
|
133.21 | I could have read 3 other books in that time! | NYOA::FERGUSON | Escaped from New York Financial District | Fri Jan 22 1988 19:40 | 22 |
| I just finished reading Dhalgren, so I picked up this conference
to see if I had missed something. Apparently not - the consensus
seems to be that you either loved it or hated it, and don't ask
why. I'm not sure if I'm disappointed or relieved about that; it
was a lot of pages to plow through to end up nowhere.
The only other Delany books I'd read prior to this were Nova (which
I thought was great) and Stars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand
(which didn't have an ending but promised a sequel which doesn't
seem to have materialized). I thought reading an earlier Delany
book would help me to figure out WHAT HAPPENED between Nova and
Stars in My Pocket (they could have been written by two different
people) but obviously Dhalgren was the wrong one to choose.
The idea of reading all the Delany novels in the order they were
written sounds good in theory, but after reading Dhalgren I have
neither the enery nor the patience. Aside from feeling like it
was a colossal waste of time, I keep asking myself, "Why did he
name it that?"
Virginia
|
133.22 | | NYEM1::RDAVIS | Ray Davis | Sun Jan 24 1988 07:57 | 18 |
| The fastest way to find out "WHAT HAPPENED" is Delany's short story
collection, _Driftglass_, whose first story is reminiscent of books
like _Babel-17_ and _The Einstein Intersection_ and whose last story
gets you into _Dhalgren_ / _Tides of Lust_ territory.
Delany never wrote other sf like _Dhalgren_ - I guess he figured
that at that length, he must've said what he wanted to with it.
If you liked _Stars up my Nose Like..._, you might want to look
up _Triton_. Otherwise, stick to the '60s work.
As far as _Dhalgren_ itself goes - with something that long, one does
develop strong feelings. I wouldn't have done all the analytical work I
do on it if it hadn't grabbed me, put me into its world, made me
believe it, and even made me like it. If it left you cold, then further
discussion is like a Republican presidential candidates' debate would
be for me.
If it didn't, I'd be glad to pontificate some more... 8 >,
|
133.23 | Stars Up My Nose?? | NYOA::FERGUSON | Escaped From NY Financial District | Wed Jan 27 1988 18:20 | 22 |
| Re: -1
I can't actually say that I LIKED Stars in my pocket, but I thought
it was an interesting theory - if you can separate sex from gender,
then what we consider deviations become the norm. I wanted to read
the sequel because I wanted to see where Delany took it (although
after reading this and the Delany conference, I'm beginning to suspect
that he's not going to take it anywhere).
The problem I have with Dhalgren is that I don't know what to make
of it. I'm baffled, but I suspect that's the intent of the book.
Is Bellona a post-nuclear city? Or is it a drug induced fantasy?
Does the end take you back to the beginning, or just back into the
middle of "A Plague Journal"? Having never read any of the French
philosophers you refer to, I can't make any comparison there.
I don't know if I even want to commit myself to saying I liked
Dhalgren, but I didn't throw it in the trash when I finished it
so that says something for it. Or my reaction to it, anyway - I
still feel like there was something there that I should have seen
but I missed it somewhere along the line (maybe that was intent,
too?)
|
133.24 | Why do you think they call it a "Papal Bull"? | NYEM1::RDAVIS | Ray Davis | Wed Jan 27 1988 22:07 | 54 |
| Pontification warning:
As a Delany watcher from some time back, I'm pretty sure he'll
eventually finish "Stars in My Spinach Like...". Me and my girlfriend
have been on the edge of our seats for a coupla years now, so you
have to excuse me if I joke about it.
I was baffled by _Dhalgren_ too - that's why I re-read it so much.
And I've never felt ripped off by the re-reading. That puts it
in the class of littrachoor, like James Joyce, William Carlos Williams,
Flaubert, Spenser, Hammett, Chandler, Russ...
Bellona is a BIG city. It is the end of the '60s commune dream,
the fulfilment of the same, the way life looks to a dyslexic, the
way cities look to an outsider, the way books work on characters,
the way SF looks at cities, and we could go on.
I'd say that it helps to know Delany's other books, but _Dhalgren_
is largely responsible for how closely I've read Delany's other
books, so that's not sufficient.
I'll just make some notes on the twist at the end -
A lot of people have pointed out that the book begins in the middle
of the sentence and ends in the middle of a sentence. A word repeats,
but the Kid stutters when he gets excited, so that's OK for looping.
As you noticed, the journal has multiple disconnections and loops
as well. Things are more complicated than a simple circle, though
- for 878 pages you should at least get a Moebius strip.
1) The Kid enters the bridge, meets a girl gang, picks up his orchid,
hears about the leader's art being destroyed
2) The Kid becomes an artist, meets a famous artist visitor, goes
through a breakdown, and attempts to leave over the bridge
3) The Kid returns from the bridge, becomes a thief-adventurer,
heads a commune, meets a famous adventurer
4) The Kid leaves across the bridge, passes his orchid to a woman
who meets a boy gang and hears about his art being destroyed.
There is also miscellaneous gossip about a woman sculptor of lions
who (on the side) heads up the chief womans-only commune in Bellona,
with similar ambiguity about when she stopped being an artist and
became a gang leader.
Personally, I think that the Kid leaves the city not to return
immediately but to meet the incoming woman much as a woman met him.
If you've read this far, I might as well do a one-sentence summary
of modern French philosphy 8 >) - the important stuff in literature
is the stuff that sneaks through the cracks. The harder the writer
works to control the material, the more interesting the cracks are.
|
133.25 | My experiences with Dhalgren | HERON::BUCHANAN | panta rhei | Sun Jan 31 1988 14:10 | 45 |
| I read Dhalgren in, let me see, 1981. I thought it was the best
Delany book I had read, and I loved them all. See, I had discovered
him late, in 1978, and hadn't read them in chronological order (Triton
was the first I tackled). So I wasn't thrown by it, the way I
might have been if I'd just read the early stuff.
What has always given me a charge in Delany, is the intensity with
which his precocious characters live their exotic lives, the
intelligence they bring to bear on whatever confronts them, and
the evident interest Delany has in words and language. At the
time, though, I didn't understand any of the meta-linguistic games that
Delany was playing, that Ray Davis has ably sketched out in a couple
of earlier replies.
But if you read Ray's replies, you might get the idea that Delany
is an austere, intellectual writer- not so. He has a big emotional
investment in many of the characters he builds: especially the
archetypes that crop up time and again. And Dhalgren, a fantasization
of commune life as described in Heavenly Breakfast, seems to me
to be the most personal of his books.
However, the structuralist side of Delany appeared to me when I
read Tales of Neveryon. Now I really recommend that someone new
to Delany reads *this* one *before* Dhalgren, cos it's shorter,
tighter and altogether more digestible. What was Delany's phrase:
"A child's Introduction to Structuralism", or something like that.
Now, at the beginning of Tales Of Neveryon are various off-puttingly
pseudy quotes from various French literary critics. I could not
understand at all what they were on about.
But the very next day at the Laundrette in Willesden Green, London,
it just so happened that the guy sitting next to me what reading
a literary magazine which just happened to include a review of the
then recent translation into English of Derrida's "Of Grammatology".
That was enough of a clue to get me going on one of the most enjoyable
treasure hunts I've ever been on: when you understand the game
that Delany is playing in Tales Of Neveryon, it's like a crossword,
trying to find out what he means by the various images and incidents
that he describes.
For example, one off the top of my head: why does Delany say tha
the inventor of coinage is the same who invented the idea of a
corridor?
More in a later reply, but I'm off for a pizza.
|
133.26 | LOVE/HATE = DHALGREN | SUBURB::SUMMERFIELDC | Wat Tyler, where are you ? | Tue Mar 01 1988 03:45 | 8 |
|
I managed to read Dhalgren at a single sitting about six years ago.
Since then, every attempt at re-reading has ended in abject
failure. Reading some of the later replies has stimulated me enough
to try once more to read it. For this I may thank you. Any further
explanations of Delany's aims/interests/thoughts would be most welcome.
Clive
|
133.27 | Speculative Fiction | NYEM1::RDAVIS | Ray Davis | Tue Mar 01 1988 20:36 | 25 |
| I'll try to keep this one short. (Folks what want to discuss RAM
drivers, hit KP-,)
BUCHANAN hit it on the head. Like with non-SF writers Flaubert & Joyce
&tc, you can tell that the writer has to struggle with the writing - so
it has to mean a whole lot to the writer to get it done at all. It has
to be loaded personally but other ways as well. I don't like Dreiser,
Niven, Disch, Eliot, or Mickey Spillane - you can tell they're being
self indulgent or being professional.
_Dhalgren_ (like all Delany's books except the Neveryona series)
drove me through a week at the wake-up-read-it-loop level because
of the obvious personal commitment.
Re-reading and re-...-reading is because of the sf-mystery-structure-
rhyme-scheme level. You _know_ that the characters ring true.
So what about all the stuff that bugged you the first time through?
Try to scratch the itches... I felt that something uncomfortable
happened halfway through, and I got a kick out of figuring out some
of the things responsible for that discomfort. If it really bugs
you that you don't know what the Kid's "scorpion" outfit was, re-read
the book to track that down. If the title bugs you, trace where
it comes from. Those are two places where I gave up - but that's
no guarantee that there's no speculations to be made.
|
133.28 | Bellona bombed ? | PANIC::DEMBINA | JGB Fan #3 | Wed Mar 02 1988 11:01 | 18 |
| Here's my pennysworth.
Read DHALGREN a couple of times with several years gap between.
1st time I was young and impressionable and into "New Wave" SF. I didn't
really understand the book (I hesitate to even call it a novel) but was
impressed with the landscape inside Bellona and various references to
things I didn't understand (but felt that I should). The raunchy parts
also added to the excitement , of course.
2nd time I'm older and (hopefully) wiser and (definitely) more widely
read. This time it seemed deliberately obscure and unconcerned with the
characters as people. I'll file it under "Failed Experiments".
Humbly yours
Paul
----
|
133.29 | Some DHALGREnish ramblings | FENNEL::BALS | The toilet was full of Nietzsche | Wed Mar 02 1988 15:21 | 88 |
| What the heck, thought I'd add my two cents, since the previous
reply (.28) sparked some thoughts. First, it's been a *long* time
since I read DHALGREN, but I have a similar feeling as was expressed
in .28. The book made a helluva impression on me at first reading
(I was around 21 or so when it was released), and I re-read it three
or four more times in as many years. I tried picking it up a year
or so ago (I'm now 35), and was unable to finish it. Maybe in some
ways it's like the science fiction equivalent of A CATCHER IN THE
RYE, a book that impresses you inordinately if you happen to catch
it at the right time and mind-set, but never seems as good when
you're older. :-)
I also agree with a variation of an idea set forth in (I believe)
.19, that DHALGREN isn't so much a science fiction novel, as a novel
about (and in some ways a parody of) some of the conventions of
science fiction (not science fiction conventions, a whole `nother
animal :-)). To make a analogy, that's the way I always felt about
STAR WARS, which I never really though of as a science fiction movie,
but rather a movie *about* science fiction. There's a subtle difference.
I'm dropping a form-feed in at this point, since I'll be mentioning
spoilers:
Back to the point. I think one of the "keys" to DHALGREN is the
conversation that the Kid has with the astronaut about information
overload. Again, it's been quite awhile since I read the passage,
but it goes something like this:
The astronaut relates the story about being tested to ostensibly
see whether he could detect and separate patterns in sounds that
were mixed together. After he finished the test, and indeed was
able to track what he thought were patterns, he was told that he
had actually been listening to "white noise." That is, that he had
been listening to completely random sounds, but his mind had still
tried to organize them into some arbitrary, and completely erroneous,
pattern.
There's a parallel situation (minor spoiler coming> in the "blank
eyes" incidents that the Kid keeps encountering. He comes up with
increasingly fantastic theories to explain this ... and finally
discovers a warehouse filled with split ping-pong balls.
Similarly, the poet is bemused when he spins a rationale for the
Kid's love of poetry, and finds out the Kid reads poetry because
"it's shorter than fiction."
Patterns. Anyone ever notice the leonine motif throughout DHALGREN?
Lion images pervade the book. There seems to be a pattern, but of
what?
The mother of the middle-class family that the Kid "works" for tries
to impose a pattern on everything, including her family and the
Kid.
And, of course, there's the whole question about the Kid's search
for his identity, ostensibly the "main" plot of the book. What the
reader finds is that the Kid *defines* his identity in the course of
DHALGREN, evolving from a rather dumb "kid" at the beginning to
a near-archetype by its end. When we finally discover he's "William
Dhalgren," it's just words. It doesn't mean anything.
So, given that I'm in almost a Heisenberg-type situation, :-) I
think what Delaney was trying to do - at least, in part - was show
how readers, most especially readers of science fiction, will, when
faced with anarchy, try to impose some rational pattern on what
they're reading. Fictional characters, if left to their own devices,
will be forced to evolve into "real" people. To digress for a second,
I think that's what the scene in the department store "means" when
the Kid looks into a mirror and sees the reflection of ... Samuel
R. Delaney.
DHALGREN is an intriguing, and frustrating, book at the same time.
I think it was Ted Sturgeon (who loved the book) who said that he
found it amusing that Delaney had been cited as the most probable
person to break out of the science fiction "ghetto." And that when
he finally accomplished it - with DHALGREN - everyone howled in
horror. :-)
I'm rambling, so I'll stop. Just thoughts for your consideration.
And one more: did you know that DHALGREN is a bibliophiles (hi,
jerry) nightmare, because there are subtle differences in the text in
each of the first eight printings?
And I'm *still* in love with Lanya. :-)
Fred
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133.30 | Now I'm confused . . . | HOCUS::FERGUSON | | Sat May 28 1988 00:31 | 19 |
| Wait a minute - wasn't William Dhalgren the newvJ14w '*spaper reporter,
and the Kid's real name was Mike Something - but he couldn't remember
because Lanya squeezed his arm? (Wow - the details stay with you
whether you like it or not.)
My big problem with Dhalgren, I've concluded, is that I approached
it as science fiction when I should have been in "literature"
mode (I was expecting other-worlds escapism and what I got was "Three
Mile Island Revisited.") I think .29 is right about having to be
in the right mindset too, because I've found lately I'm not in the
right frame of mind to read anything that makes me think ("Sword
of Shannara" is all I can handle right now). Then again, maybe
it's the fact that a situation Delany speculated about has now become,
if not commonplace, still a reality.
It's a haunting novel. Unfortunately (for me) it doesn't allow
a surface reading because it's not neatly tied together and resolved
at the end.
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133.31 | Frankenstein!=Monster, ThinMan!=NickCharles, Kid!=Dhalgren | NYEM1::RDAVIS | Ray Davis | Fri Jun 10 1988 16:30 | 16 |
| Yep, the Kid was not William Dhalgren. I think Delany anticipated that
readers would try to "make sense" of the title that way and that's why
he threw in that incredibly irritating moment when the Kid remembers
part of his name. (Same tactic as the "explanation" of the red
eyeballs - the mystery is demeaned, not cleared up.) Delany tries hard
to give the feeling that "everything is being described" and that
"everything is planned" while still keeping the reader from getting
warm fuzzies about having figured everything out.
Note that there's a hint that Dhalgren knew the former owner of
the notebook (a variation of his name is in the list at the beginning)
and the Kid has a momentary fear that Dhalgren was actually the
former owner himself. There's also the editorial comment that Dhalgren
might be a former editor of the notebook. But these details just
help add to the itchy feeling about the title - they don't explain
it.
|
133.32 | Haunting | BOOVX1::HURST | | Wed Sep 21 1988 19:30 | 16 |
| I've always wanted to talk to, or hear opinions from people who
have read Dhalgren.
WHAT A BOOK! I've had the book for 8 years.
Tried to re-read it 10 or more times.
I still can't bring myself to throw it away.
Still find images from it coming back to me.
I REALLY did like it... somehow...
Oh yah!- Did anybody notice that the weapon the Kid had (the Orchid)
could be the model for Freddy's weapon in the Nightmare On Elm Street
series of movies?
Well anyway, I'm going to "gear up" and read it again one day.
betty
|
133.33 | continued from note 754.51 | POLAR::LACAILLE | There's a madness to my method | Tue Jun 06 1989 09:49 | 13 |
|
I guess the first time I read it, I was at the tender age of
16 years; I didn't know what the hell to make of it. I again picked
it up in my early twenties. Then again about three years ago...I
was about 25 then.
Its kind of neat to note the different reactions to the book
at various stages in ones life.
I guess when I cross the ol' three zero boundry I'll have to
pick it up again.
Charlie
|
133.34 | Was it all a dream... | AYOU38::CHARLES | Hype... Hyper... Hypest... | Tue Mar 01 1994 08:41 | 22 |
| The comment which suggested that Dhalgren be classified as
"literature" might be nearer the mark than you think! I recently
read "The Castle" by Franz Kaffka. Just to give you a flavour:
Strange character wanders into town, (throughout to book he is
only referred to as "K" (K -> Kid gedit!)) although he appears to
know why he is there and was invited it soon becomes apparent
that this is not quite the case.
Conversations with various characters reveal different slants,
the carpet is constantly being pulled from under your feet. The
town has a dream like quality, distances and positions change.
Similarly some of the actions are dream like. K sets up home
with a School teacher in her "class room" (no troilism, though).
If you managed to read Dhalgren and are looking for a similar
challenge try "The Castle", at least you might know what
Kaffka'esk means at the end of it. Some great writing as well
"Where one might die of strangeness".
BTW anyone know if Sam D acknowledged basing Dhalgren on "The
Castle"?
|