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The House of Rumour (2012)

door Jake Arnott

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17415155,608 (3.55)12
Larry Zagorski spins wild tales of fantasy worlds for pulp magazines. But as the Second World War hangs in the balance, the lines between imagination and reality are starting to blur. In London, spymasters enlist occultists in the war of propaganda. In Southern California, a charismatic rocket scientist summons dark forces and an SF writer founds a new religion. In Munich, Nazis consult astrologists as they plot peace with the West and dominion over the East. And a conspiracy is born that will ripple through the decades to come. The truth, it seems, is stranger than anything Larry could invent. But when he looks back on the 20th century, the past is as uncertain as the future. Just where does truth end and illusion begin? THE HOUSE OF RUMOUR is a novel of soaring ambition, a mind-expanding journey through the ideas that have put man on the moon yet brought us to the brink of self-destruction. What will you believe?… (meer)
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1-5 van 15 worden getoond (volgende | toon alle)
A wonderful and strange book that tells the story of the space race through interlinked short stories - David Mitchell style - ranging through the various and surprising forces that influenced it.

Gareth Southwell is a philosopher, writer and illustrator.
  Gareth.Southwell | May 23, 2020 |
The House of Rumour is a sprawling novel featuring Aleister Crowley's role in the British interrogation of Rudolf Hess as a sort of psycho-social asymptote. It's rather galling to me that it took five years for me to get wind of this 2012 book, especially considering that the author had previously written another novel with Crowley as a character, The Devil's Paintbrush. In fact, this more recent one touches on so many and varied of my peculiar interests, that I think it may have the greatest number of different subject tags ever applied to a single novel in my personal library catalog.

The plot spans the 20th century, with cults, sci-fi writers, occultists, spies, aliens, Nazis, Trotskyists, musicians, transsexuals, and all manner of paranoids and conspirators. The twenty-two chapters include over a dozen narrators and central characters, but they are all linked into an integrated manifold plot that is as much obscured as it is revealed by their separate subjectivities. It uses a number of historical figures as characters, but author Jake Arnott has done his homework, and the whole thing keeps its plausibility very well. Time after time, people and things in this novel that seemed so neat that they must be fictional turn out to be positive historical fact.

The literary style here is perhaps most comparable to that of David Mitchell. There's a fair amount of metafictional intricacy, and not just when Arnott seems to vicariously boost the book he's writing, remarking that, "Using the Major Arcana as a structure looks like a gimmick at first, but in the end the Tarot bestows an ominous gravity on the narrative" (179). He's referring not only to the book in which the sentence appears, but more overtly to Gresham's Nightmare Alley, an actual novel from 1946 accurately described. And then it is paralleled again within the story by The Quantum Arcana of Arnold Jakubowsi, an imaginary 1966 novel written by one of Arnott's principal characters (339)--and evidently riffing on Phil Dick's Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch.

Arnott's trumps mostly have the titles used in Crowley's Thoth Tarot, except for "The Female Pope" and "Judgement." They are also in the customary Golden Dawn sequence, except that Death and the Devil have been swapped. But the plot is not linear, and the chapters are not in chronological order. It's like looking at a moving scene through a spyglass only gradually being brought into focus, and with key elements at the edges of the visual field. I'm not entirely sure that this book wouldn't read just as clearly and effectively if one were to shuffle a pack of trumps and read the chapters in the order of a random draw. It might even be feasible and fun to create a "Choose Your Own Adventure" apparatus for this book, allowing a reader choices at the end of each chapter, to follow their own curiosity into the different corners of the story, pursuing the traces of characters and themes.

The narrative voices of the individual chapters are highly varied, yet the prose is very lucid throughout. The trick is not to understand what it says, but what it portends. That's an experience I value as a reader, and if your tastes are like mine, you'll enjoy the hell out of this book.

Londoner Arnott has been very successful with getting his fiction adapted to TV in the UK, and this book was well-received critically. It sure could make a terrific series over one or two seasons.
3 stem paradoxosalpha | Sep 17, 2017 |
Curious book... very metafictional, some bits interesting and some bits seemed contrived... clever but cold. ( )
  jkdavies | Jun 14, 2016 |
Some of this book is brilliant, but other parts seem a bit disjointed and confused – or at least that was my first impression. Not a science fiction book, it is filled with sci-fi writers and a couple of stories. Not a mystery in the traditional sense, it is filled with strange parallels and mysterious circumstances. I suppose my main qualm is with the structure loosely based on the trump cards in the tarot deck – a structure at once engaging and yet somewhat artificial. Fun to read, but it just didn’t really seem to hold together or to be going anywhere. I enjoyed the fact that it is a mish-mash of spy story, mystery, philosophical meandering etcetera, and love the blending of real and imagined characters, but just what is it all about? Nevertheless, it made me think and that's worth four stars in/of itself. ( )
  dbsovereign | Jan 26, 2016 |
I loved this book that was about nothing, but everything. It's not an alternate history, because the major historical events described did occur (WWII, Nazi occultism, JPL, the SF surge in popularity both in book and movie form, the Cuban Missile Crisis, Jonestown, etc.). This was about perspective, about what these events *could* have looked like and meant to some of those involved on the fringes, and how truth vs. fact can be very subjective.

Arnott's characterizations were fascinating and complete. He made his characters very real, and very plausible. His arrangement of voices through the use of the Major Arcana of the Tarot made everything fit perfectly together. This was an enjoyable and satisfying read. ( )
1 stem Amy_Jesionowski | Nov 3, 2015 |
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Larry Zagorski spins wild tales of fantasy worlds for pulp magazines. But as the Second World War hangs in the balance, the lines between imagination and reality are starting to blur. In London, spymasters enlist occultists in the war of propaganda. In Southern California, a charismatic rocket scientist summons dark forces and an SF writer founds a new religion. In Munich, Nazis consult astrologists as they plot peace with the West and dominion over the East. And a conspiracy is born that will ripple through the decades to come. The truth, it seems, is stranger than anything Larry could invent. But when he looks back on the 20th century, the past is as uncertain as the future. Just where does truth end and illusion begin? THE HOUSE OF RUMOUR is a novel of soaring ambition, a mind-expanding journey through the ideas that have put man on the moon yet brought us to the brink of self-destruction. What will you believe?

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