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The Dandelion Clock

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The Dandelion Clock

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Hardback
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Description

A novel of resistance. In rage and fury, it is a protest against "the dying of the light." An old teacher, Leonardo Furioso, nicknamed Fury, sets out to delete his blighted memories of a life filled with misadventures, misdirected passion, and mistaken identity. The Dandelion Clock is also a portrait of a failed artist as an old man in a black frock coat with long, flaring, white hair. In his beleaguered and bewildered "second childishness" on the threshold of oblivion, Fury mocks both life and death as cruel jokes and joyous illusions, but delights in their cruel joy. The image of the dandelion clock refers to the childhood pastime of counting the puffs it takes to blow the seed-head off a dandelion in a past-flowering state to tell the time. Before it is too late, and in his rebellion against nature, Fury attempts to annihilate the past. He even hijacks and takes over the narration, shifting it from the third to the first person to speak for himself. As he says, one of the characteristics of the storytelling is the language--not only what is said, but how it is being said. His version of events requires the language of his faltering experiences. He wants to discard it all together, and subtract himself from the world before it erases every trace of his life story. He wants to discard it all together, and subtract himself from the world before it erases every trace of his self-obliterating life story. But, from another point of view, that of his alter ego, Hugh McNab, a stronger force wipes out its opponent virtually without loss. It is a story of transformation, a tale of conversion. In this way, the telling of the tale converts it, like subatomic particles, into radiant energy.

Author Biography:

Anthony Labriola's work has appeared in The Canadian Form, PRISMinternational, Lo Straniero, Vallum, Stone Voices, Still Point Arts Quarterly, Passion: Poetry, ZiN Daily (Bells & Pomegranates), and Strange Fictions. His tribute to Dylan Thomas, a poem entitled "Missing Dylan," appears in The Colours of Saying: A Celebration. His poetry collections include The Rigged Universe (Shanti Arts Publishing, 2013), Sun Dogs (Battered Suitcase Press, 2014), Invisible Mending, and The Blessing of the Bikes (Anaphora Literary Press). Among his published prose works are Devouring the Artist, The Pros & Cons of Dragon-Slaying, Poor Love & Other Stories, The Lonely Barber (Anaphora Literary Press, 2014). He lives in Toronto with his family.
Release date NZ
September 7th, 2017
Audience
  • General (US: Trade)
Contributor
  • Designed by Anna Faktorovich
Illustrations
Illustrations, black and white; Illustrations, black and white
Imprint
Anaphora Literary Press
Pages
234
Publisher
Anaphora Literary Press
Dimensions
152x229x18
ISBN-13
9781681143514
Product ID
26878359

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