(urth) Fwd: Babbiehorn?: Was: a sincere question mostly for roy
James Wynn
crushtv at gmail.com
Sat Nov 19 08:31:16 PST 2011
> James Wynn wrote:
>> I think it is a mistake to think that just because Wolfe writes
>> novels investigating identity that he has this idea in his mind of
>> how it works.
>
> David Stockhoff wrote:
> OK. But he has to have at least a recognizable basic mechanism, even
> if the details are fuzzy.
The mechanism is that the Neighbors (at least in the ways we encounter
them) are spiritual beings. The mechanisms of their nature are delved
into every time the Rajan dream-travel's. The Neighbor reanimates and
repairs Horns body and inhabits it (thus the Puppet foreshadowing).
Later, Horn's body is dying and he has no other body to inhabit. His
fellow Neighbors help him out by sending him to one...THE ONE that will
help him accomplish his mission. It has always bothered me that Silk was
dying just as Horn was, but understanding that the Neighbors are
Time-Travelers resolves all that.
Additionally, making the narrator of this story Horn walks away from the
pattern set in The Book of the Long Sun. There, the story is about Silk,
but it's told by Horn. Here it is sort of about Silk and Horn but it is
told by neither of them (for they have died) even though it is
autobiographical. It's genius. And it perfects the ambiguity Wolfe likes
in his story telling.
Marc is on the right track, but he has under-estimated Wolfe's cleverness.
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