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Martin Gibbs

Autore di The Spaces Between

6 opere 19 membri 3 recensioni

Opere di Martin Gibbs

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Voltaire's Excellent Adventure: The Broken Boarder: Gatsby, Booze, and Hot Philosopher Action!
By Martin D. Gibbs and Arthur Graham
CreateSpace
Reviewed by Karl Wolff

What the hell did I just read? And I mean that in the best possible way. Voltaire's Excellent Adventure: The Broken Boarder: Gatsby, Booze, and Hot Philosopher Action!, by Martin D. Gibbs and Arthur Graham is certainly unique and downright bizarre. The plot involves the French philosopher Voltaire as a time-traveling adventurer and his quest to save a couple minor characters from F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby. The novel begins with "An Apology and an Explanation," announcing the saga will be "as logical as a plate of spaghetti written by a Microsoft programmer." What follows is a twisted take on literary postmodernism. One part Mulligan Stew, one part Monty Python, and one part The Norton Anthology of World Literature ... and squirrels ... and wombats ... and lots of drinking, vulgarity, and lunacy.

The main thrust of the plot has Voltaire careening around Jay Gatsby's estate, attempting to save Owl-Eyes from the evil machinations of Klipspringer. Nick Carraway's literary identity is given another, shall we say unorthodox, explanation. And Voltaire makes a detour to another planet to fight a Cthulhu-esque caricature. While the plot moves things forward (or is it backward?), it's not what I found either important or compelling about this strange novel. Only mid-way through reading Voltaire's Excellent Adventure, did I discover it was actually a sequel.

What was wonderful about the novel was how reckless and unhinged it was. It reminded me less of other bizarro literature than the pataphysical absurdities of Alfred Jarry. In Ubu Roi, Jarry has The Entire Polish Army as played by a single character. The play, written in 1896, anticipated both surrealism and absurdism. It also mocks the pieties and pomposities of religion, nationalism, and masculinity. Voltaire's Excellent Adventure comes close to that kind of anarchic spirit. Voltaire travels through time, hobnobs with fictional characters, and gets violent with a cleaver.

That said, Voltaire's Excellent Adventure isn't for everyone. Even for those who enjoy a bit of bizarro lit with their morning coffee may find the novel either off-putting or too loosely written. Granted, this self-published work lacked a certain discipline found in other mainstream works. But for a self-published work, the production was first-rate. I also loved the cover image and its parody of Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure. I found its gleeful disregard for narrative conventions to be charming. The constant references to squirrels and wombats came across as juvenile and silly. I kept waiting for the story to totally fall apart, but it never happened. It was too weird to put down and too joyously sideways not to react positively.

Out of 10/8.5

http://www.cclapcenter.com/2016/01/book_review_voltaires_excellen.html
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Segnalato
kswolff | Jan 22, 2016 |
An interesting and creative look at the three wise men and their journey. I received this as a goodreads giveaway.
 
Segnalato
MiriamMartin | Dec 12, 2014 |
Our story follows two adventurerers making their way to a powerful Seith named Ar'Zoth. Our adventurerer's are Zhyfrael or Zhy, a local drunk, and Qainur, a mercenary, who is seeking a powerful Seith named Ar'Zoth. Zhy wonders if he's made the right decision about going to leave Belden with this young man. Zhy has nothing better to do anyway and it could be fun maybe. Qainur has all the supplies ready for their trip and is excited about starting on this adventure even if Zhy is not sure about it. Along the way, two traveler's meet up with Torplug claiming to be a mage but that remains to be seen. Torplug slowly becomes part of the two traveler's group yet keeps to himself. As the traveler's continue on their journey, they're attacked by a Gherwza and they barely manage to escape. Then the traveler's see a man possessed by a demon and they barely escape with their lives. Meanwhile Bimb and Zhy's father Lynn travel a little known tunnel to reach Zhy and his companions before meeting Ar'Zoth. Zhy and his companions have been attacked by The Knights of Black Dawn twice on their journey so far with no real explanation as to why it is so. Zhy is uneasy about seeing this Seith and doesn't understand why Qainur is hellbent on meeting this Seith. Torplug is an unknown quantity in the group although he is willing to share his opinions and thoughts about Seith yet goes about his business. Will they find Ar'Zoth? Will Ar'Zoth teach Qainur? What is Torplug hiding? Will Zhy ever be comfortable? Will Bimb and Lynn reach Zhy and his companions in time? What is Ar'Zoth planning? Your answers await you in The Spaces Between.

While reading this story, I found at times that it dragged in places where it should have been moving at a faster pace than it is going. I also found that when it was moving to fast it left me behind in the story leaving me confused and frustrated at the same time. I liked the overall concept of the story. The story was told in a fascinating way that leaves the reader wanting to know more about the characters and what will happen next. This is why it's a three star rating instead of a four star rating.
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Segnalato
WolfFaerie17 | Aug 23, 2012 |

Statistiche

Opere
6
Utenti
19
Popolarità
#609,294
Voto
½ 3.3
Recensioni
3
ISBN
9