(urth) the prime calcula/his citadel and other quotes
António Pedro Marques
entonio at gmail.com
Wed Jan 19 09:33:46 PST 2011
James Wynn wrote (19-01-2011 16:44):
> On 1/19/2011 10:23 AM, Gerry Quinn wrote:
>> Anyway, that's beside the point. Some of these people - and others,
>> such as Mint - can have their not mentioning the resemblance explained
>> away. But ALL of them? Why? It's like Murder on the Orient Express,
>> but with no detective! When has Wolfe ever worked like that?
>
> Interesting. I've often used this very analogy to describe Wolfe's
> novel. I tell people, "If Wolfe had written MotOE, there would be no
> detective. That would be the reader's job. All the story would be told
> by the suspects and and maybe a clever but distracted Red Cap. The
> murder itself would be an incidental event. "
But it's not a good analogy. Gene Wolfe is the opposite of Agatha Christie.
What GW leaves out of the text can be deduced, and the various parts tie in.
It's the figuring out of what isn't told that is interesting. AC fills her
solutions with things nobody could know about. There's no figuring out
anything, as there is no way to. The solutions are what they are, just as
they could be anything else, on a whim.
Maybe some see GW as a kind of AC and that may explain why they sometimes
come up with interpretations that have nothing to do with anything. That
would make sense for an AC story (if it were possible to make sense of AC
stories, of course).
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