April, come she will . . .
Michael Butterworth
offers us
Excerpts from
My Servant the Wind:
A Diary of the New Wave
May 30th 2030
He is netting only fragments. In frustration he tries harder, becoming more confident with each attempt. Once 'arrived' here, he even attempts to 'think back' to pre-atomic conditions, like I spend so much of my time doing in reality now. Clawed from the future, these pieces eerily correspond to my present-day reveries - when he, the wind, allows me them.
[Non-Textual Insertion: My typing skills have declined so much that I needed about an hour to copy the above excerpt through typing it, which is why I don't quote as much as I used to, though I enjoy the excerpt, which tells me that it's from the future, and that bit of information problematizes the chronology somewhat for me, as I'd thought that the past [1971] was, in effect, our present, and that we were receiving fragments from the future [2030]. {Update: In the light of day, I'm not sure what I meant last night, except perhaps that 2030 seems not to be a mere fragment from the future.} Things also to know: The entries fall into Column A or Column B, which also happen to overlap, spatially, though not in the same space at the same time. The 'story' is a post-apocalyptic one, and though it jumps back and forth in time, from before and after the apocalypse, the reader soon adjusts and follows through. Highly recommended reading.]
Labels: Novel
8 Comments:
At your recommendation, I've placed this book on my Amazon Wish List. Thank you.
If you visit this book's entry on Amazon.com, you'll find a very nicely written, non-spoilery review of it.
Thanks for the heads up, Kevin. (I hope I wasn't spoiling anything in my incoherent rambling last night.)
Jeffery Hodges
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It is an excellent work, and your selection from the text and your succinct and insightful description do the book good service.
Thanks for your kind words concerning my comment.
Jeffery Hodges
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Blogged.
Noted.
Jeffery Hodges
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Thanks, Jeffery. I was particularly pleased you thought the reader “soon adjusts” to the time cuts — that the reader WOULD, was the biggest risk for me when I came to devise and then write this book.
Well, let's hope I'm right about readers. I have been known to err on things . . .
Jeffery Hodges
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