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A Voyage to Arcturus (Bison Frontiers of…
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A Voyage to Arcturus (Bison Frontiers of Imagination) (original 1920; édition 2002)

par David Lindsay

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1,2793414,998 (3.4)65
A Voyage To ArcturusBy David Lindsay
Membre:SCPeterson
Titre:A Voyage to Arcturus (Bison Frontiers of Imagination)
Auteurs:David Lindsay
Info:Bison Books (2002), Edition: Cmv, Paperback, 274 pages
Collections:To read again, Other fiction, Votre bibliothèque
Évaluation:****
Mots-clés:Aucun

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Un voyage en Arcturus par David Lindsay (1920)

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    Etidorpha The End of Earth par John Uri Lloyd (paradoxosalpha)
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» Voir aussi les 65 mentions

Affichage de 1-5 de 34 (suivant | tout afficher)
Viagem psicodélica fantástica por outro mundo onde uma série de encontros leva o protagonista a episódios em que o mal e o bem entram em questão. Há um renovado confrontamento com novos valores morais e formas de perceber o mundo. E o protagonista assim é afetado, absorvendo esses valores e formas para depois confrontá-los, em novos encontros ou em situações trágicas. A dor, a violência e a morte se fazem presentes, e a falta de empatia e o confronto entre as visões de mundo leva o personagem ao assassinato e à destruição. Tudo ocorre em um ritmo acelerado, de um encontro a outro, como uma jornada de descoberta espiritual e de crise quanto ao que é válido e significativo, e o papel do amor, das emoções e do prazer nessa travessia. ( )
  henrique_iwao | Aug 30, 2022 |
I hated this novel. It's really not a sf novel. It is some sort of philosophico-religio-fantasy acid trip (I know it's clumsy) with a sf framework to set up the fantasy. Ultimately it espouses some sort of gnostic reality for the universe.

Did Lindsay really personally believe this? If not, what is the point of this clumsy dull, ultimately pointless, novel? Maskull's adventures are laughably unlikely: after a sf setup that transports him and two "friends" to the Arcturus system, he traverses all the interesting parts of the planet and meets all the important characters by just walking around a bit. Each character seems to present some philosophical system that is ultimately rejected and the character nearly always dies (You don't want to meet Maskull.). Maskull undergoes a number of weird transforming experiences and encounters along the way and ultimately dies after a partial revelation of who he is. In the end only Nightspore is allowed to glimpse the "truth" about things that the nefarious Krag already knows.

The whole thing might have been tolerable if the ideas had not been presented in such an excruciatingly boring manner. I had to force myself through the last quarter of the novel.

Other authors, Philip K. Dick come to mind, plumb some of the same depths but do it more effectively both because their writing and stories are more interesting and they ultimately leave things more open ended.

The book only warranted a second star because it was thankfully not too long. ( )
1 voter Gumbywan | Jun 24, 2022 |
David Lindsay's visionary first novel A Voyage to Arcturus was influential among writers of twentieth-century fantasy, although its metaphysical preoccupations and sheer strangeness have barred it from a wide readership. Michael Moorcock called the book "one of the great originals," but it clearly has roots in Blake and the Romantics. In particular, "Klingsohr's Fairy Tale" by Novalis tells of a series of adventures leading to the reunion of the heavenly court of Arcturus with the terrestrial household of humanity, and the triumph of Eternity over Time, and it seems to have been an influence for Lindsay. But Lindsay's Arcturian tale involves a more pessimistic gnosis, in which the wrong of the beginning is continually expressed in conflicts and obscurities.

My copy of the book is the 1985 Citadel Press edition, to which is prefaced "David Lindsay and the Quest for Muspel-fire" by Galad Elflandsson. Aside from a biographical sketch of Lindsay and a short bibliography, this essay mostly consists of plot spoilers and debatable interpretations, despite Elflandsson's professed intention to "eliminate some of the confusion one would normally find upon reading it 'cold'" (9). I recommend leaving it for after reading the novel.

The apparent protagonist of A Voyage to Arcturus is Maskull, a name that is never supplemented or fully explained, although a start is made by the character Panawe, who draws on his intuition to ask, "Has there been a man in your world who stole something from the Maker of the universe, in order to ennoble his fellow creatures?" (58). This particular characterization of the Prometheus myth does seem on some level to underlie the action of the larger book.

The story begins with a bourgeois séance in London, carefully introducing a large set of persons who become entirely irrelevant after the first chapter. Maskull, along with Nightspore and Krag, characters who are pivotal to the novel, are late arrivals here for what turns out to be a debacle. These three then go to Scotland, in order to embark in a "torpedo of crystal" (43) to the planet Tormance, which is in the double-stellar system of Arcturus. Maskull loses consciousness during the trip (projected to take nineteen hours), and awakes on Tormance with no trace of the ship or his companions.

Maskull's adventures across Tormance take up the bulk of the book. He travels from place to place, in each encountering one or two figures with whom he develops relationships that involve affection, hostility, inspiration, and instruction. A peculiar feature of his journey is that his physiognomy is repeatedly altered, particularly by the growth and attenuation of new sensory organs in his forehead and his breast. The people he encounters often have similar or related features. He moves northwards throughout, at first in a sort of aimless way, but with a mounting determination towards the end of the tale. In addition to its people, Tormance features bizarre life-forms that transgress boundaries among animal, vegetable, and mineral; colors unknown on earth; and surpassingly strange landscapes.

The level of enigma and exotic adventure in this book is off the charts, and the best comparandum for these features may be Lloyd's Etidorhpa. (In fact, the books complement each other: Arcturus can be read as the ouranian sequel to the chthonic Etidorhpa.) Why did René Laloux die without making this story into an animated feature? The injustice of the universe is adequately demonstrated.
4 voter paradoxosalpha | Aug 8, 2021 |
Star Maker was practically normal compared to this, easily the weirdest sci-fi book I've ever read, and at 1920 one of the oldest apart from the foundational H.G. Wells/Jules Verne stuff. In fact it's so weird that it's not really science fiction at all, more like a series of crypto-parables about gnostic mysticism (the author was apparently a strange variety of Scottish Calvinist, but I don't think John Calvin would have approved of a lot of what goes on in the book) that just happens to be set on an alien planet but might as well be in Wonderland or Narnia. I'm not really sure what to say about it - the main character Maskull visits a seance, meets some odd people, and takes a really strange journey across the planet Tormance, orbiting Arcturus, to solve the "mystery" of why some corpses acquire a strange grin after rigor mortis sets in. The whole thing has a vaguely dream-logic air to it, but it gets even hazier once Maskull is shape-changing and soul-stealing his way across an alien planet and meeting various characters. All the various ethical tests Maskull has to go through as he makes his way from the arrival point to the Demiurge's cave and then back to Earth are supposedly intended to illustrate Lindsay's own feelings on religion, but if so then he might as well not be a Christian at all. As a work of pure fantasy it reminded me somewhat of H. P. Lovecraft's The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath, but once I got to the end I had one of those "what did I just read?" feelings and I'm not sure what exactly I took away from the book. ( )
  aaronarnold | May 11, 2021 |
Having seen the madness of WWI, David Lindsay wrote this novel, which is a fantasy rather than Science fiction. The book delves into some serious questions of identity and what makes behaviour, and information. In conclusion, I found this book rather creepy to my Western European mind. It was originally published by Methuen in 1920, but maintains its tone rather well to this day. ( )
  DinadansFriend | Jul 28, 2019 |
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Nom de l'auteurRôleType d'auteurŒuvre ?Statut
Lindsay, Davidauteur principaltoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Brumm, WalterTraducteurauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
Delville, JeanArtiste de la couvertureauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
Eiseley, LorenIntroductionauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
Holitzka, KlausArtiste de la couvertureauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
Noble, PeterNarrateurauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
Pepper, BobArtiste de la couvertureauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
Peterka, JohannIllustrateurauteur secondairequelques éditionsconfirmé
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On a March evening, at eight o'clock, Backhouse, the medium - a fast-rising star in the psychic world - was ushered into the study at 'Prolands', the Hampstead residence of Montague Faull.
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Just as the principal character of an ordinary dawn is /mystery/, the outstanding character of this dawn
was wildness. It did not baffle the understanding, but the heart.
It was an entirely new colour—not a new shade or
combination, but a new primary colour, as vivid as blue, red, or yellow,
but quite different. When he inquired, she told him that it was known as
“ulfire.” Presently he met with a second new colour. This she designated
“jale.” The sense impressions caused in Maskull by these two additional
primary colors can only be vaguely hinted at by analogy. Just as blue is
delicate and mysterious, yellow clear and unsubtle, and red sanguine
and passionate, so he felt ulfire to be wild and painful, and jale
dreamlike, feverish, and voluptuous.
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