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Dream Archipelago af Christopher Priest
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Dream Archipelago (udgave 1999)

af Christopher Priest

MedlemmerAnmeldelserPopularitetGennemsnitlig vurderingOmtaler
2178124,338 (3.87)18
The Dream Archipelago is an interlinked collection of stories in which Christopher Priest explores war, relationships and different forms of reality. The stories take place in a world that is vastly different from our own.
Medlem:1001Fantasy
Titel:Dream Archipelago
Forfattere:Christopher Priest
Info:Simon & Schuster (Trade Division) (1999), Paperback, 288 pages
Samlinger:Dit bibliotek
Vurdering:
Nøgleord:1001 Fantasy, Votes 03, Series 1 of 1

Work Information

The Dream Archipelago af Christopher Priest

  1. 10
    Annihilation af Jeff VanderMeer (AlanPoulter)
    AlanPoulter: Both contain landscapes and people that play with with our sense of reality.
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This superb collection of short stories by Christopher Priest lives up to its title, being both subtle and subtly off.

Off not as in bad... but off as in we're being carried away by deep waters that are subtly carrying away our sense of the universe.

You see, these stories feel awfully familiar and normal, or if they're evidently and obviously on an alternate Earth, at least everything seems ultimately recognizable... until it isn't. And this, let me tell you, is damn awesome. There's practically no way we can't fall into his trap. He lulls us along and then stops the stories at places that confound and make us ask really deep questions.

At first blush, we keep seeing big themes of incompletion, usually surrounding unsatisfying sexual encounters, synesthesia, all kinds of off-art, and the sense that the war is just WRONG.

But expect no resolutions. These aren't those kinds of stories. They're deeply personal, intimate, and often disturbing, focused almost entirely on the inner or nearby worlds of the main characters, usually involved in what might be characterized as a travelogue of the Dream Archipelagos.

And like the other Dream Islands, the islands are a character in themselves, they're both disturbing and fascinating, and they're set right in-between two warring nations that have been going at it for up to a few thousand years. They're not going to defeat each other. They have too much invested in just keeping the conflict going.

There's undercurrents under the undercurrents, references back to real and fictional novels, themes that are both profound and familiar, and it's always heavily sexual.

These are almost impossible to truly describe. They're just that good. Expertly crafted, confounding, intimate, and interrupted. A few of them are truly wonderful, especially the last novella, but after reading them, it really is as if I've been living a dream... Not wild. Just carried away with the currents.

If you can't tell, I'm kinda at a loss for words. I feel like I'm one of the characters in these stories, all fish out of water and simultaneously horrified and caught in the beauty. :)

Anyway. They're absolutely worth the read. Really amazing, actually. :) ( )
1 stem bradleyhorner | Jun 1, 2020 |



Christopher Priest is among the most inventive authors I’ve encountered in fifty years of voracious reading. Whenever I feel inspired to launch into new vistas of imagination, all I need do is read (or listen via audible) to yet again another one of his books.

Thanks, Christopher, you have yet to let me down, most especially when your tales are set on an Earth-like planet comprised of thousands of unique islands. Included in this island series: The Affirmation, The Islanders, The Gradual and the book that's the subject of this review, The Dream Archipelago, containing some of the darkest yarns the author has written. Case in point with two from this collection: The Miraculous Cairn and The Cremation are drenched in sexually charged Gothic horror.

In any event, here are a number of memorable highlight from my travels in The Dream Archipelago:

YOU ARE ENTERING THE TWILIGHT ZONE
The first short tale, The Equatorial Moment, is written in intimate second person. The narrator addresses you as a pilot who has had a foretaste of the timeless: “So here in the sky you believed that you had glimpsed the insight: the mystery of the vortex appeared to be laid bare before you. It made time cease, you reasoned. All flying aircraft that entered it were held by it so long as they maintained a steady course, only to be released when they made their crucial change of direction.”

Sounds to me as if Christopher Priest is inviting us to make an artful shift from Earth-bound clock time to the ethereal realm of the Dream Archipelago. Ars longa, vita brevis. Having taken the trip myself, I can assure you it is well worth the ticket.

NOVELIST AND HER NOVEL
There’s Moylita Kaine, seasoned author of The Affirmation (not Christopher Priest’s; her own novel well over 1,000 pages). Readers of The Islanders will remember Moylita back when she was a young, aspiring writer sending off fan letters to her hero, the famous islands author Chaster Kammerson. In this book's story entitled The Negation, Moylita's novel has made an indelible impression on Dik, an eighteen-year old soldier who has read the work repeatedly since age fifteen. This novel not only proved the most profound experience of his young life but Dik harbors a secret ambition to become an author himself and write a novel very much like The Affirmation.

Dik has an opportunity to speak with Moylita Kaine one on one. Following his conversation (among the more intriguing sections of this tale) Dik has an added incentive to evaluate The Afirmation in light of ideas he came across in a book of literary theory: reading a novel is as much a creative act as writing one; the significance a reader ascribes to a novel holds greater weight than the author’s intension; and, above all, the novel is great if a reader deems it great. We are left to consider how unfolding events in The Negation will impact young Dik’s assessment of The Affirmation.

HEAD TRIPS
In Whores, an unnamed narrator, a soldier on extended sick leave, plans to visit islands within the Dream Archipelago but he must contend with an ongoing medical issue: as a consequence of being gassed by the enemy, he suffers from intense bouts of synesthesia.

We follow him as he wanders about on his first island, Lucie, where houses becomes monstrosities and give off cynical laughter. He’s assailed by a host of smells, enticing and captivating, while sounds and textures bend in weird, bizarre and sometimes frightening ways. However, he claims he's no longer disturbed when music becomes strands of colored light or he's subjected to other varieties of hallucination.

By and by he meets one of the island whores, Elva, a slightly built brunette, and follows her to her room. He feels he is about to suffer an extreme attack of synesthesia but doesn’t leave; he judges the strange dance of his senses will enhance rather than diminish his sexual pleasure. Little does he know he is about to undergo the most harrowing nightmare of his life.

SCIENCE FICTION ART
What I find particularly fascinating about a Christopher Priest tale is what I term “The Jolt of the Weird.” In other words, events move apace in a somewhat, recognizable, realistic way then suddenly the protagonist is hurled into a fourth dimension - for example, the bending of time in The Gradual or the phenomenon of invisibility in The Glamour. Undoubtedly, this is the very reason his books are categorized as science fiction.

The most obvious example of such a weird jolt in this collection occurs in The Discharge, a tale where the twenty-something narrator is caught between the regimentation of his everyday cookie-cutter life as a foot soldier and his aspiration to live in the world of art and aesthetics and vivid imagination.

Several pages in the narrator describes a technique developed by painter Rascar Acizzone wherein a kind of pigment is applied to canvas using unique ultrasound microcircuitry. To a casual observer Acozzone's large canvases appeared to be little more than arrangements of color. But (please sit up and take particular note) if a viewer actually makes physical contact with the canvas's ultrasound pigments then hidden images are brought to life and supercharged with shocking eroticism. "Detailed and astonishingly explicit scenes were mysteriously evoked in the mind of the viewer, inducing an intense charge of sexual excitement." Whoa, baby! Now that's creativity in action!

The narrator goes on: "I discovered a set of long-forgotten Acizzone abstracts in the vaults of the museum in Jethra and by the laying on of the palms of my hands I entered the world of vicarious carnal passion. The women depicted by Acizzone were the most beautiful and sensual I had ever seen, or known, or imagined. Each painting created its own vision in the mind of the viewer."

The tale continues. The narrator ultimately makes the choice to flee the military and become an artist. He goes on to employ Acizzone's technique of ultrasound microcircuitry into his own paintings. After a number of years the military police catch up with him. However, they also have to deal with his highly unique paintings, which turn out to be just the thing that saves his life. You will have to read for yourself to discover the specifics. Thanks again, Christopher!



"He became still, four of his fingers resting on the pigment. For a moment he stayed in position, looking almost reflective as he squatted there with his hand extended. Then he tipped slowly forward. He tried to balance himself with his other hand, but that too landed on the pigments. As he fell across the painting, his body started jerking in spasms. Both his hands were bonded to the board." - Christopher Priest, The Dream Archipelago


Christopher Priest, British author extraordinaire, born 1943 ( )
3 stem Glenn_Russell | Nov 13, 2018 |
A collection of short stories written at different times but all set in the eponymous archipelago, which is the only neutral zone in a centuries-old conflict between northern and southern continents. Variously damaged people make their way through the islands' diverse cultures and landscapes as exiles, expatriates, draft-dodgers and outsiders. ( )
  questbird | Jan 24, 2018 |
The equatorial moment

A meditation on a strange set of air currents over an island group that seem to suspend events in the middle of a war.

The negation

A soldier in a warring global block hears that his favourite author is visiting his mountain posting, a fortified wall close to the enemy. An encounter with her opens up questions which eventually lead to a strange event on the wall.

Whores

A soldier suffering from synaesthesia uses his leave to visit the island his nurse (reputedly deceased) came from. He finds instead 'love' of a sort. Extremely unpleasant

The cremation

Graian is invited to a cremation on an island with different customs regarding funerals and a different language. A female relative makes a pass at him, inviting him for a walk in the jungle. She tells him about a disgusting creature called a thrme which eats its host from the inside. It becomes clear what his role at the funeral really is...

The miraculous cairn

A man is accompanied by an attractive female police officer to the island of Seevl, where his last relation has just passed away. Memories of earlier visits do not chime in with reality and one strange happening in particular suddenly alters our view of the present.

The watched

Ordier, the inventor of a tiny camera observation device has, which he thought controlled but now appears ubiquitous, has retired from business and lives in a remote spot, next to a Quaatari settlememt. The Qaatari react by becoming motionless when observed so not much is known about them. But Ordier has a secret observation port into their compound...A classic.

NB the 2009 Gollanz paperback appears to have fewer stories than earlier editions ( )
  AlanPoulter | Apr 8, 2013 |
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La présente édition de L'archipel du rêve est conforme à celle qui a paru chez Gollancz Publishing en 2009. Elle comporte un récit de plus (Vestige, initialement paru dans la revue Bifrost, n°53) que la dernière édition française du recueil, parue en 2004 dans la collection Lunes d'encre des éditions Denoël. L'ordre des textes a également été revu par l'auteur.
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The Dream Archipelago is an interlinked collection of stories in which Christopher Priest explores war, relationships and different forms of reality. The stories take place in a world that is vastly different from our own.

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