Also, roglich gives them a second book in a blue binding. It has equations. Equations are mentioned as omitted on page 221 as a secret, where the burning man imagery starts. There are multiple copies of that book of equations, on the second shelf. I think that resonates with Arabella... but why equations? It is also to the bookcase that Roglich speaks. <br>I think after 2001 Wolfe put more and more exposition in the embedded symbols - they have been there before even Peace (Ben yahya- son of John (were), Elia- olive: Olivia etc but now they are way harder to pin down. I’m certain Grafton is represented by a pencil (graphite) in land across. What the heck. <br>On Sunday, September 30, 2018, Ab de Vos <<a href="mailto:foxyab@casema.nl">foxyab@casema.nl</a>> wrote:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">
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<p>Great work Marc.</p>
<p>Could it be relevant that time is not mentioned at all by
Roglich, instead temperature differentials are introduced when
space is displaced. Very weird. There must be some connection
between Roglichs digression about space, the cold and hot polarity
throughout the book and the plot. An indication that time is
involved is maybe that the dates don't fit.<br>
</p>
<p>The jungle world I found very inhospitable and constricted and
not a place to spend time. Could it not be a place like Father
Inure's garden? When people are going in and out of the
jungle-room temporal changes may be involved like coming back
before you entered. Then there is the river - or brook? - of time
in Urth of the New Sun.</p>
<p>I believe you also mentioned an interpretation like the one of <i>
Point Blank</i> (neo noir 1967) interpretation. Some critics
said the whole movie was a revenge fantasy of the dying man (Lee
Marvin) shot at the beginning. According to Wiki: "Some critics
consider <i>Point Blank</i>, "a haunted, dream-like film that
draws upon the spatial and temporal experiments of modernist
European art cinema",<sup><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point_Blank_%281967_film%29#cite_note-16" target="_blank">[16]</a></sup>
especially the "time-fractured" films of French director <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alain_Resnais" title="Alain
Resnais" target="_blank">Alain Resnais</a>.<sup><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point_Blank_%281967_film%29#cite_note-17" target="_blank">[17]"</a></sup></p>
<p>The names bother me as well: all those Co..'s and the fact that
Payne and Fish are not mentioned in the list. Why not? Are they
two known characters in disguise?</p>
<p>I found Camestros Felapton's remarks interesting as a partial
list of Wolfean tropes stretching back to Cerberus and not only
characterizing his later work.</p>
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<div>Op 29-9-2018 om 21:27 schreef Marc
Aramini:<br>
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<div dir="ltr">Here is my writeup on A borrowed man - two to go
(land across, evil guest).
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