![]() ![]() (Could it be set in Brooklyn? It could.) Nor is it interested in creating a nuanced, intriguing, or even three-dimensional portrait of Publishing World for readers who may not already be involved - or, to use the narrator's preferred word, embroiled - in the literary sphere. ![]() It has no paragraph breaks, no chapters, almost no plot, and no interest whatsoever in life outside the publishing industry. That said, it is unreadable.ĭead Souls takes place during one long night at the bar of a London Travelodge, where Wiese tells the story of his downfall to the narrator, a supremely irritating, hyper-self-conscious poetry magazine editor. It is undeniably a smart book, and, in certain ways, a good one. Riviere is sharp and funny, and he fills his novel with insights that are both rude and correct. ![]() In general, I feel similarly toward Dead Souls. As a critic who strives to be completely honest, I can't help but take this proclamation as a bit of an insult - what am I, chopped liver? - but still, I know it holds truth. In the sycophantic poetry community, Wiese declares, praise springs from "monstrous insincerity," and is, therefore, deadly. In a scene close to the end of the English poet and publisher Sam Riviere's debut novel Dead Souls, a twice-disgraced poetry plagiarist named Solomon Wiese explains that, before he got expelled from the literary establishment, he never listened when people complimented his work. ![]()
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