Exciting news that Europa Editions has acquired the U.S. and Canadian rights to Steve Erickson’s novel These Dreams of You. It will be published in early 2012.
Erickson’s most recent novel, Zeroville, was published by Europa in 2007. Per Europa, it’s in its fifth printing and continues to do well.
Here’s how John Domini explained that book in his essay “Against the Impossible to Explain: The Postmodern Novel and Society” in The Quarterly Conversation:
The protagonist’s psychology, barely functional, drew a lot of comment in the reviews. None, however, noted that similar issues afflicted nearly everyone in Zeroville. Nearly everyone’s an obsessive, so that the feel is stylized; the repetitions, the movie chatter, actually contribute to the pleasure and momentum of the reading. More than that, with so many one- or two-note characters, and with the settings of some later episodes quite out of this world, the two people of genuine depth can’t help but insinuate something like, yes, a social value. These are two women: first Vikar’s mentor in the editing booth, sick and old and drinking more each time we see her, and later the teenager at risk, a punk girl with family issues and perspicuity. Vikar has a personal agenda, in taking the girl under his broken wing; his own obsessions included her mother, also broken. More than that, the struggle of both the actual parent and the stand-in dramatizes how these halcyon ’70s could be anything but for women. Says one of the more reliable fanatics in Vikar’s circle: “It’s really not a business for broads.” . . .
Related is a structural gambit that might’ve been cooked up at a meeting of the arch-experimental OULIPO. I mean the numbering of the chapters. These can be very brief (one is a blank) but more often run a few pages, and Erickson counts first forwards to chapter 227, then backwards to 0 again. The turning point falls midway along the overall length, too, and calls attention to itself in the voice of the same unnamed Author who engineers the skillful flashes forward and back. Now, if the watershed number has some special significance in filmmaking, it eludes me. But I do think of the loser’s bookkeeping in Allen Ginsberg’s “America”—”America two dollars and 27 cents January 17, 1956″—because I do see how the reset occurs at the peak of Vikar’s success. He’s just been handed the Blue Eyes project, and the film’s to be featured at Cannes. What follows is the downside, inevitable it would seem, given his tenuous connection to the practical. But in Zeroville, the fall is complicated, first by a rise in nobility. Vikar sacrifices himself to save the girl. Moral growth like that allies the novel to a classic tradition, but its latter half also makes an audacious move into the surreal.
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Wow, did this make my day! I have been a fan of SE since Arc d’X was published, which of course led me backward to Days Between Stations, Rubicon Beach, and Tours of the Black Cock…I’ve read every single one of his books since then…
And what a revelation American Nomad was, by the way….it remains one of the best books on the American soul I’ve ever read…and one of the best (weirdest, most existential, most surreal, but still, BEST) exegeses I’ve ever read on politics in this country…
I can not WAIT until 2012 for this puppy…Europa: GET IT OUT FASTER, PLEASE!!!!!!!!!
YIKES! That’s supposed to be Tours of the Black CLOCK. Boy, I wish I could fix that one…
Rarely, if ever, do I write LOL but I’m afraid I have to in this case.
A bunch of guys who happen to be named “Steve” makes for “related posts”?
Erickson is my favorite author. Had the honor of reviewing him back when Zeroville came out. Can’t wait for this.