Solar Labyrinth: Exploring Gene Wolfe's "Book of the New Sun"
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Average customer review:Product Description
Gene Wolfe's BOOK OF THE NEW SUN has been hailed by both critics and readers as quite possibly the best science fiction novel ever written. And yet at the same time, like another masterpiece of fiction, James Joyce's Ulysses, it's been deemed endlessly complex and filled with impenetrable mysteries. Now, however, in the first book-length investigation of Wolfe's literary puzzlebox, Robert Borski takes you inside the twisting corridors of the tetralogy and along the way reveals his solutions to many of the novel's conundrums and riddles, such as who really is Severian's lost twin sister (almost certainly not who you think) and why he believes the novel's main character may not even be the torturer Severian. Furthermore, and in essay after essay, Borski demonstrates how a single master key will unlock many of the book's secret relationships--all in the attempt to guide you through the labyrinth that is Gene Wolfe's BOOK OF THE NEW SUN.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #413770 in Books
- Published on: 2004-05-20
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 204 pages
Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Robert Borski, in addition to writing the entry for Gene Wolfe in the recent Supernatural Fiction Writers, has penned a series of essays about Wolfe?s novels for The New York Review of Science Fiction. He continues to work out of Stevens Point, Wisconsin.
Customer Reviews
A Great Critical Look at the Greatest SF Novel
I would recommend this book to any fan of Wolfe's magnum opus. It is basically broken down into small, cogent essays on different characters and conundrums in the Book of the New Sun. I don't agree with every one of Borksi's conclusions, but they are well supported by the text and extrapolation, and they certainly made me rethink a few of my own assumptions. He also references the criticisms of John Clute and Michael Andre-Driussi. Overall, it makes me want to read the Great Book yet again and discover something new.
A great book if you're a fan.
Borski does a great job of exploring the four (plus one) books of the New Sun series. I learned several things I had either not known or had failed to recognize--even after at least 5 re-reads over the last 20 years. And while I don't agree with some of his conclusions, it's hard to deny the enthusiasm he has for Wolfe. So if you're a fan, what's not to like about getting another fan's well-constructed insight into one of the greatest SF works ever written? Get it. Like the series, it will make you think.
Deep... but somewhat off the reservation
Some of the thoughts evoked by the author are very deep and insightful. If you enjoy GW's series, it will help you to find some new levels of appreciation for the cleverness. Reveals some of Severian's relatives... the clues were there, but I never noticed them.
But.... some of his ideas are just nuts. The part I dislike is that if the author does not know the answer and cannot come up with a clear deduction, he'll almost make it up. While he uses text from the book, he will almost (not literally) try to prove red is truly green "because they are opposites and that's the key! Yes, the key! So, during Christmas... um, they go together... and it's a Christian holiday, so OBVIOUSLY Gene Wolfe meant for us to see that!"
Good to read, but take it with a grain of salt. I'd prefer less reaching and more "I just don't know"





