Title | : | Catastrophe Practice |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | 1564782522 |
ISBN-10 | : | 9781564782526 |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 342 |
Publication | : | First published January 1, 1979 |
Catastrophe Practice Reviews
-
An unusual hodgepodge, an unusual manner in which to kick off a most unusual quintet. Three ‘Plays For Not Acting’, each prefaced with a rambling philosophical essay, comprise the first part. These plays, ‘Skylight’, ‘Landfall’, and ‘Cell’, are hardcore avant-garde affairs, replete with complex stage directions, characters who talk in non sequiturs, bizarre poetic phrases, and never to each other, and babble the sort of pretentious drama-school dialogue once in vogue in the 1970s school of useless arts degrees. The short novel, ‘Cypher’, rounds off the rest of the book, and puts the reader in safer prose territory, however, Mosley at this stage isn’t concerned with the stylistic mastery of his previous works, but advancing his philosophical theories, and this means the infuriating staccato dialogue technique, the tendency for the characters to think and speak in unusual poetic shards and non sequiturs, and the abandonment of any sort of helpful entrypoint for the reader. I found this increasingly painful to read. On the plus side, Hopeful Monsters and Impossible Object are masterpieces. I remember those fondly.
-
The kind of book that makes me feel dumb, like I should be getting something more out of it but instead I'm just missing it. Interesting but maybe a little too experimental.
-
The plays just don't work, too abstruse to communicate. The novella intrigues and the essays work to provide a schema for the whole mess. But still 'm intrigued, am I confusing difficulty with intelligence? Still I admire the chutzpah that went into making it.