"My sleep began in the spring of 1914. I slept through both World Wars and the tainted calm between. It was as if I had been cursed by an evil fairy, pricked by an enchanted spinning wheel; an... This description may be from another edition of this product.
This is one of the most beautiful books I've ever read. Ignore the rantings of the surrealist police -- Ducornet is an original, and this book is her best.
Trip to the subconcious
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 28 years ago
"The Fountains of Neptune" is a dream-like, dense anti-novel that uses dreams and myths to discuss the perception of history, memory, and loss. Like the novels of Jeanette Winterson, "Neptune" does not rely on standard plot structure. The basic story is two-fold: young Nicholas grows up in preWWI France, a precocious nine year old living a town of eccentric storytellers. A traumatic event causes him to go into a coma. He wakes up 50 years later, after both World Wars, having spent his life in dreams. The second part of the story concerns his relationship with his therapist, Dr. K, and her attempts to rebuild his memories. But it is Ducornet's unlimited imagination and gift for fabulation that is the true star here. Her images are sharp, eerie, humorous -- and always haunted. Ducornet leads us into the labyrinth of the subconsious -- complete with its demons, half-heard conversations, and golden memories -- but leaves no trail of twine or breadcrumbs to find our way out. Phantom ships, enchanted seascapes combined with idyllic countrysides and the philosophical world the Spa where Nicholas and Dr. K have their metaphysical relationship make this one labyrinth you won't want to leave -- Minotaurs or no
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