Wednesday 18 December 2013

Empty Space

(December 2013)
  


More proof, if proof were needed, that M. John Harrison is a phenomenal writer. Further proof also that the breadth and scope of his imagination completely outstrips my ability to say anything intelligent or even coherent about it.

Here are some other people saying smart stuff about this book and the Kefahuchi Tract novels in general. I’m afraid I’ll have to refer you to them for anything even approaching ‘understanding’ or ‘insight’. I am bereft. I find myself simultaneously blown away and drained. If that mixing of metaphors discomforts you then I recommend that you don’t touch these books with a bargepole, or any other long rigid object you may choose to so employ.

There is just so much going on here, and in lesser hands it would collapse under the weight of its own contradictions, but these aren’t lesser hands and as the conflicts and contradictions multiply you, like the characters, search for meaning that you suspect may be there but can’t ever be sure will reveal itself. And the words… my lord, the words –

‘Without the operation of irony on trash,’ he maintained, ‘there would be no kitsch.’ To him, the postmodern ironisation was like the Death of History of the coming Singularity. ‘Everything was changed by it. Nothing could be the same again. It had the irreversibly transformational qualities of a Rapture.’ He believed it had those qualities even now.
              Ruby’s commitment to body-art and collectable tambourines couldn’t let this go unchallenged...

There is nothing more I can say on this, but rest assured I’ll be thinking about it for a long time yet.

7 comments:

  1. Augh. I need to read this. I'm still at a loss for how to review the first book. Maybe it's alright that we can't condense someone's life labor into a few snappy paragraphs.

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    1. Yep. It's time like this I'm happy I can retreat behind my (increasingly flimsy) rationale that these aren't reviews, and this whole exercise is just a glorified checklist of stuff I've read. Funny how it's much, much harder to write about the good stuff than the bad.

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  2. I heard a great podcast with him on it..I think it might have been one of the Coode Street podcast episodes and they talked a lot about this books. So much so that they took a book that initially did not interest me (for who knows what reason) and made me want to read it.

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    1. I've seen this Coode Street thing mentioned in a few places. I really should take a listen, but the last thing I need is an excuse to buy more books.

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  3. I find that i need to be in a certain frame of mind to read M. John Harrison. Maybe i've just been getting ADHD in my old age, I used to dive right into his books, and these days I find it's a little difficult for me to get into them. I loved Light and Nova Swing, so no good reason why I haven't picked up Empty Space. oh yeah, ADD.

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    1. I get that. I'm lucky in that, quite apart from any deeper themes or meaning, I just love his use of language so even if the rest is going over my head I can still get that out of it. Reckon this is better than Nova Swing, fwiw.

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    2. "Reckon this is better than Nova Swing,"

      that is actually worth quite a bit.

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