|

Read an Excerpt
Purchase
About the Author
Home
|
La Medusa - Reviews
"Is the brain all these little movies, one synapsing into the
next? Or I mean is culture that? Who are all those people on the
freeway next to me, or dying in the blink of an eye when I forget
about them. Vanessa Place's La Medusa is a novel of a million
(I am sure there is a more precise count) brilliant suggestions
about the mind and time and us. What seems impossible is that she
is pulling "it" off in this impressive tome that moves like traffic
when you have gotten it impossibly incredibly light. No wrong moves
here. We get home fast."
—Eileen Myles
"Dazzling and daze-inducing, Vanessa Place dares to ask the dangerous
question: What happened to Modernism? Why did what was ambitious,
difficult, serious and experimental in Joyce, Eliot, Pound, Stein,
and Beckett give way to a glittering string of infinite jests -
high-wire acts, virtuosity, transcendental Camp?
La Medusa returns to James Joyce's Ulysees to find
the inspiration for an investigation into the nature of experience.
Los Angeles takes the role of Dublin. The brain and its double cortex
generate the stylistic intricacies that the organs and senses do
in Joyce.
And this is above all a Female Epic in which the
swirling city-universe is explored and shaped by the petrifying
eye and intellect of the wily Medusa, her coiling locks extending
everywhere. "
—Michael Silverblatt, Bookworm, KCRW
Public Radio
La Medusa, Vanessa Place's monumental polyvalent,
polyglot epic novel of Los Angeles in which the postmodern morphs
into random-access postcontemporary, in which the device of the
narrative text in film script form has replaced that of the epistolary
novel, is like a shocking rock slide of polished stones of the first
water, cut by master jeweler, faceted into ten thousand-and-one
sides — and the whole spill run in relative slow motion with
no drag, no yawns, all be-bop, hip-hop Now. And sardonic: it zaps,
out Fante-ing Fante and out-Rechy-ing Rechy. Looked at metaphorically
in terms of motion pictures, Medusa is an epic silent,
as long as Von Stroheim's Greed and every bit as cumulatively
powerful. But one thing is certain: no matter how good the picture
may turn out to be, the book will definitely have been better.
—James McCourt
|