THE CONSPIRATORS: A Borgean Tribute

310453B2-04A8-4281-91AA-A0216A2048E4
RAPHUS PRESS MMXIX
Edited by Alcebiades Diniz
Work by Rhys Hughes, Mark Valentine, John Howard, Fábio Waki, Thomas Phillips, Alcebiades Diniz Miguel, Justin Isis, Jonathan Wood, Stephan Friedman, Brendan Connell, D.P. Watt, Adam Cantwell, Eric Stener Carlson, Fernando Klabin, Roman Lasalle.
When I read this book in due course, my thoughts will appear in the comment stream below…

18 thoughts on “THE CONSPIRATORS: A Borgean Tribute

  1. This is an aesthetically handleable volume of around 140 pages, with a wonderful full page architectural picture to deck each work. My copy numbered 10/100.
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    THE HEMISEMIDEMIURGE by Rhys Hughes
    “16. A hotel without rooms, walls or roof for penniless travellers that is located both nowhere and in every street in the city.”
    A sort of Air B & B? The numbered list is exhaustible. This is a street corner unmissable Rhys Hughes classic, no mistake. Stringently algorithmic without algorithms, about an architectural student, son of Pierre Menard who helped produce the multitudinous monkeys’ version of Quixote. And the younger Menard reminds me of my invisible Nemo No 6, and my non-contextual abiding to the Intentional fallacy, like learning about the history of Athens without knowing anything about it! Or eschewing any family connection seeking him out! The main story is his project as a student to sort of retrocausally ‘rebuild’ his own digs — a conceit to cherish. Can’t do justice to it here.
    My previous reviews of this author: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/494-2/
  2. ON THE ART by Mark Valentine & John Howard
    “That which is invisible briefly becomes visible, and the clarity of a companion reasserts itself.”
    This may or may not be the best story I have read this year so far, but it is certainly my favourite. In fact, it may be my favourite for far longer than that. It has everything I love. A quest for a rare book, ponderings upon the nature of chance, and luck in book searching as well as the “Howevers” of bookshop contiguity with another bookshop, and by inference, coincidence, plus philosophies upon invisibility and the nature of companionship, a visit to an ambient town here with a quirky museum, a museum of blotting paper, much bibliographical stuff to die for, and this being a top flight elegant MV/JH collaboration per se. On top of all that, the nature of the rare book itself in the physical context here, with it’s being stitched into another book, and with other considerations of nesting, and possible strobing of invisibility and visibility, all tied into THIS book with its tight margins within its spine’s seams whereunto the words threaten to vanish! However, I hold by what I said above about this physical book; it is indeed supremely handleable, and that brinkmanship of inner margin – and my need to use sensuously my fingers to manipulate it – is an essential part of its charm. I even sense that was done intentionally by the publishers. Or it was a serendipity of chance?
    My previous reviews of these authors: https://dflewisreviews.wordpress.com/john-howard-mark-valentine/
    • A loose bookmark with a fascinating prose work on it by RHYS HUGHES about bookmarks…
      It now seems somehow appropriate to read this bookmark following the above MV/JH story, this being a loose story rather than an inbuilt one.
      But, having read it, I find it contains a reference to a library within another library!
      It also criticises people who mark a book by dog-earing pages, with which I agree needs criticism. It also criticises other marks plotting the way a reader reads a book, so I wonder what it might think of my pencilled marginalia in all the books that I real-time review.
      Just before reading this bookmark, I went for a walk and posted this Facebook post on my return:
      “I was just walking around the area in various obscure roads and streets, but in every one I seemed to be followed by an ice cream van very loudly playing I’m Forever Blowing Bubbles. It even followed me quite closely to my home street. It was a very strange route it took.”
      A true account, by the way. I now wonder if the van was a bookmark for each locality I walked?
      Finally, the hardback version of WEIRDMONGER had one of my stories straddling the foldover flaps of its separate dustjacket!