(urth) Wolfe at Dragon*Con (AEG)
James Wynn
crushtv at gmail.com
Fri Sep 11 11:04:41 PDT 2009
> Any theory that seeks to reconcile these two seemingly contrary points
> must
> do so within the bounds of the text, and cannot ignore such text-based
> facts
> as we are afforded, however inconvenient those facts may be to said
> theory.
I absolutely agree with this. I made no definitive declarations about Reis's
death or Chase being the impersonator. The last sentence in my first post on
this subject stated "I'm not prepared to prove it is so." I truly appreciate
you taking time to take pot-shots at my theory but 1) I don't have much of a
theory yet to shoot at, and 2) keep your bead on the theory/hypothesis and
not at me.
The text based refutations you've offered are not as compelling as you seem
to think they are. This is especially true for your "practical", non-text
based refutations. I've explained why, but I don't seem to be getting
across. As you know, anyone who believes that all the answers in a Wolfe
novel are in the text in any emphatic, unequivocal sense is deluding
himself. De-looooooding. Even if the explanation is there, it is typically
surrounded by 3 or 4 other reasonable interpretations of the explanation,
and someone can probably point to an expert character to say it couldn't
possibly be true. Every Wolfe novel and plenty of short stories requires
that the reader take a jump over an abyss at some point and then look back
to see if he has landed safely. It's nice when, as now, Wolfe gives us a
direction to jump for.
Everything Cassie said to Klauser has be read with the same suspicion that
one reads in what the President and Chase said to each other. She's
deliberately not telling Klauser the straight story. She's not even coming
to him as Reis's bride. You should assume that everything she says is only
half-true or sort-of true. If it seems that something she says was the whole
truth, clearly stated, that should bother you. That conversation is a really
bad well to draw from to prove anything. It can only confirm what you've
proven elsewhere.
> Now back to your original jumping-off point: If Wolfe said that Cassie was
> going to Woldercan to find Reis, and if he wasn't pulling your leg (I
> would like to have the full context of his remark)
His quote doesn't require a lot of context for anyone who has read the book.
He wasn't talking to me directly. He was speaking on a panel. He was talking
about one of his characters that he truly loved: Cassie. In doing so,
summarized AEG in terms that were not especially revealing to anyone who had
read the book. Then he got to the end of the story which he described
exactly as I have recorded it: "Cassie loved Bill Reis and at the end of the
novel she goes to Woldercon to look for him."
At last he summarized the last paragraph as being heartbreaking for him
since he was saying goodbye to Cassie.
There was no camera in the room, so this is the best I can do. I don't
understand why you are so adamant to imply I'm an idiot or that Wolfe was
trying to pull something. I was as perplexed by the statement as you seem to
be. Deal with it. I'm trying to.
> that doesn't preclude
> Reis having died on the island, just as the text has it.
Sure. But the hypothesis I've offered requires the least nuance and clears
up certain other problems I've had with the ending, just as I've stated.
> Ambassador
> to Woldercan is a high-profile position in a digital age. There would have
> been pictures and video in the media, both of which would have penetrated
> a
> magical disguise. Ambassadorships don't happen in a vacuum. Reis would
> have
> to have been a fool to even try such a ruse.
This is a ridiculous assertion. When is the last time you saw media coverage
of the ambassador to England leaving for his post? Mind, the universe of AEG
is not our own.
> More to the point, Reis would have had no need to seek Gideon's post as
> ambassador. He was more than wealthy enough to go to Woldercan on his own
> dime, even if he had any reason to go there, just as Cassie did.
Why do you assume that's the reason he would have assumed Gideon's identity?
The US government wasn't going to let him leave without revealing his
secret. The aliens of Takanga seemed to have a beef with him. He might have
used his manufactured gold to get to Woldercon, but eventually it would have
shown up as radioactive and the government would have followed him there.
J.
More information about the Urth
mailing list