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Logogryphe : une bibliographie de livres imaginaires (2004)

par Thomas Wharton

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2066131,330 (3.92)41
"The particular volume I’m looking for is nameless, lacking a cover, title page, or any other outward markings of identity. Over the centuries its leaves have known nothing but change. They have been removed, replaced, altered, lost. The nameless book has been bound, taken apart, and reassembled with the pieces of other dismembered volumes, until one could ask whether there is anything left of the original. Or if there ever was an original." So begins Thomas Wharton's book about books. What follows is a sequence of variations on the experience of reading and on the book a physical and imaginative object. One tale traces the origins of a fictional card game. Another tells of a duel between two margin scribblers. Roving across the globe and from parable to mystery, Wharton positions his reader between the covers of a book that is not. How are we to read the pieces that follow? As extraneous to the nameless book, as parts of it in its original form or perhaps as evidence that it has relocated to other existing volumes? The Logogryph takes its cues from magic realism and the techniques of cinematography. The result is a mind-bending caper through the process of reading, the relationships we establish with fictitious worlds and the possibility of worlds yet unread. Wharton indulges his reader with tales of fantastical cities where the only occupation is reading and of the plight of a protagonist suddenly dislodged from his own novel. And what becomes of the reader who reads all of this? This book is a Smyth-sewn paperback with a jacket and full sleeve. The text was typeset by Andrew Steeves in Caslon types and printed on Rolland Zephyr Laid paper. The jacket was printed letterpress. The inside features illustrations by Wesley Bates.… (plus d'informations)
  1. 10
    Si par une nuit d'hiver un voyageur par Italo Calvino (CGlanovsky)
    CGlanovsky: Excerpts and intimations of books that don't exist. A celebration of reading.
  2. 00
    Les Villes invisibles par Italo Calvino (unctifer)
  3. 00
    А Perfect Vacuum par Stanisław Lem (unctifer)
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» Voir aussi les 41 mentions

Ni un essai, ni un roman, l'idée de ce livre était peut-être plus séduisante que sa réalisation. En fait, la quatrième de couverture et quelques entrevues et critiques promettaient tellement plus. J'ai aimé toutefois quelques-uns des passages, quelques-unes des idées, quelques-unes des élucubrations bibliophiles, plusieurs des livres impossibles. Je demeure sur ma faim, mais l'auteur et son imagination débridée m'ont mis en appétit de ces livres dignes de la bibliothèque de Borges.

[http://rivesderives.blogspot.ca/2017/03/logogryphe-une-bibliographie-de-livres.html] ( )
1 voter GIEL | Mar 9, 2017 |
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This book is not—as you had anticipated from the bas-relief depiction of a shipwreck on the cover—a novel about a castaway on a desert island. The novel is an island, and in reading it you become its solitary inhabitant.
A nervous, spasmodic, never utterly satisfying activity. A careful madness. A violent act of will, of escape, of refusal. A delay, a prolongation, an unending search.
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"The particular volume I’m looking for is nameless, lacking a cover, title page, or any other outward markings of identity. Over the centuries its leaves have known nothing but change. They have been removed, replaced, altered, lost. The nameless book has been bound, taken apart, and reassembled with the pieces of other dismembered volumes, until one could ask whether there is anything left of the original. Or if there ever was an original." So begins Thomas Wharton's book about books. What follows is a sequence of variations on the experience of reading and on the book a physical and imaginative object. One tale traces the origins of a fictional card game. Another tells of a duel between two margin scribblers. Roving across the globe and from parable to mystery, Wharton positions his reader between the covers of a book that is not. How are we to read the pieces that follow? As extraneous to the nameless book, as parts of it in its original form or perhaps as evidence that it has relocated to other existing volumes? The Logogryph takes its cues from magic realism and the techniques of cinematography. The result is a mind-bending caper through the process of reading, the relationships we establish with fictitious worlds and the possibility of worlds yet unread. Wharton indulges his reader with tales of fantastical cities where the only occupation is reading and of the plight of a protagonist suddenly dislodged from his own novel. And what becomes of the reader who reads all of this? This book is a Smyth-sewn paperback with a jacket and full sleeve. The text was typeset by Andrew Steeves in Caslon types and printed on Rolland Zephyr Laid paper. The jacket was printed letterpress. The inside features illustrations by Wesley Bates.

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