3
0
Support the library.
Your support helps keep books free for everyone ❤️
📍 Noticed
On the Calculation of Volume IV
by Solvej Balle
Sponsored
Synopsis
The fourth installment of Balle’s expansive, and highly ambitious On the Calculation of Volume teems with new faces, new people, and voices from every corner of the western world.We're a little more than halfway through Balle's hypnotic, monumental seven-volume novel ...
The fourth installment of Balle’s expansive, and highly ambitious On the Calculation of Volume teems with new faces, new people, and voices from every corner of the western world.
We're a little more than halfway through Balle's hypnotic, monumental seven-volume novel about a woman set adrift within the walls of November 18th. Balle's riveting project continues to wring ever more fascinating dimensions from time and its hapless, mortal captives. In Book III we saw the addition of a handful of new characters to Tara's world--fellow travelers within November 18th--and now Book IV heralds the arrival of many others, and soon to be even more, roaming uncertainly through the same November day. Could this be the first stirrings of an alternate civilization? The big house in Bremen turns into the headquarters for this growing group of time-trapped individuals. But who are they and what has happened to them? Are they loopers, repeaters, or returners? A brilliant modern spin on the myth of Babel in the Book of Genesis, Book IV asks urgent questions, concerning the naming of things, of people, and of the functions of language itself-must a social movement have a common language in order to exist? Snatches of conversation, argument, and late-night chatter crowd onto the pages of Tara's notebooks. Amid the buzz and excitement of a new social order coming into being, Book IV ends with a sudden, unexpected, and tantalizing cliffhanger that no one--not even Tara, our steady cataloger and cartographer of the endless November day--could have foreseen.
We're a little more than halfway through Balle's hypnotic, monumental seven-volume novel about a woman set adrift within the walls of November 18th. Balle's riveting project continues to wring ever more fascinating dimensions from time and its hapless, mortal captives. In Book III we saw the addition of a handful of new characters to Tara's world--fellow travelers within November 18th--and now Book IV heralds the arrival of many others, and soon to be even more, roaming uncertainly through the same November day. Could this be the first stirrings of an alternate civilization? The big house in Bremen turns into the headquarters for this growing group of time-trapped individuals. But who are they and what has happened to them? Are they loopers, repeaters, or returners? A brilliant modern spin on the myth of Babel in the Book of Genesis, Book IV asks urgent questions, concerning the naming of things, of people, and of the functions of language itself-must a social movement have a common language in order to exist? Snatches of conversation, argument, and late-night chatter crowd onto the pages of Tara's notebooks. Amid the buzz and excitement of a new social order coming into being, Book IV ends with a sudden, unexpected, and tantalizing cliffhanger that no one--not even Tara, our steady cataloger and cartographer of the endless November day--could have foreseen.
You May Also Like
Death on the Lanai: A Golden Girls Cozy Mystery (Golden Girls Cozy Mystery Series)
Rachel Ekstrom Courage
Stubborn Puckboy
Eden Finley
Wrong Number. Right Don.
Natasha L. Black
Deep Work: Rules for Focused Success in a Distracted World
Cal Newport
Sharpen Your Claws: Wicked Ones (The Wicked Ones Duology Book 2)
Twoony
Night Swimming
Aaron Starmer
Philosophy Picks
View All
Fight Oligarchy
Bernie Sanders
Tiny Experiments: How to Live Freely in a Goal-Obsessed World
Anne-Laure Le Cunff
Stop, in the Name of God: Why Honoring the Sabbath Will Transform Your Life
Charlie Kirk
The Awe of God: The Astounding Way a Healthy Fear of God Transforms Your Life
John Bevere
El loco de Dios en el fin del mundo
Javier Cercas
The Creative Act: A Way of Being
Rick Rubin