The Abdication (Book/Ero(t)icomic Epic Aquired, Sometime Last Week)

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Rainer J. Hanshe’s The Abdication. Started this one the yesterday. Very weird, very cool. More thoughts to come, but here’s the blurb:

Spring 2032: an enigmatic bandleader named Triboulet arrives by helicopter in Rome, where his carnivalesque troupe awaits with a legion of animals and unruly kids. When provoking states of joyous panic through their ritualistic frenzies, the troupe’s arrival proves restorative, for the world is beset with famines, plagues, and religious conflicts, which Triboulet seeks to neutralize with freeing laughter. As he and his troupe begin constructing strange edifices in the Eternal City, sacred sites around the world suffer terrible, often beguiling forms of vandalism, and rumors abound that the Christ has actually finally returned.
Although radical Islamic sects claim responsibility for the vandalism, the culprits remain unknown: is it the Jihadists, anarcho-atheist intellectuals, or eco-terrorists? Religious and political authorities grow leery of the troupe and suspicious of Triboulet, whose true identity remains a mystery. The very future of the world is at stake, and while touring Israel during Christmas, Triboulet and his raucous band of pranksters bear witness to the world’s pivotal crossing into a new reality.
Albert Camus noted that ‘the metaphysics of the worst’ expresses itself in a literature of damnation and argued that ‘we have still not yet found the exit’ from such literature. With his second novel, Hanshe has found the way out, offering in fact something not only promising, but astounding, a pathway that is into a new reality, into a ‘physics of the best.’ The Abdication is a true ero(t)icomic epic.

4 thoughts on “The Abdication (Book/Ero(t)icomic Epic Aquired, Sometime Last Week)”

  1. […] The Abdication (Book/Ero(t)icomic Epic Aquired, Sometime Last Week) (biblioklept.org) Share this:PrintEmailFacebookLinkedInDiggRedditTwitterStumbleUponLike this:LikeBe the first to like this post. Tagged: Albert Camus, Caligula, Camus, Cuba, Federico García Lorca, Special Period, Streetcar Named Desire, Tennessee Williams, Virgilio Piñera Posted in: Breaking News ← Walk over me: Stepping over Balkan performance artist Igor Josifov is both a work and a walk of art Be the first to start a conversation […]

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  2. Thanks for alerting me to this. Just finished reading it. Astounding. Dangerous. What to do now? Where is the troupe. I want to live with them! This book could start a revolution.

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  3. The blurb mentions that this is Hanshe’s second book. Is his first book written in the ‘metaphysics of the worst’ or in a manner that gives insight into this novel?

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