Such a loss. He was one of the greats, IMO, in a similar tier to Borges or Delany for me. Such a strange synchronicity that he's passed around the time the Notre Dame cathedral fell.
It reminds me of an old rhyme by Laurie Anderson:
When my father died
We put him in the ground
When my father died
It was like a whole library
Had burned down
There is no fantasy novel or series that is as dense, hallucinatory, baffling, and utterly profound as the Book of the New Sun. Its understated revelations are mindblowers, the keyhole view of of its world never seems like it is big enough to take in its vastness.
The Fifth Head of Cerebus is almost as good. Maybe better?
This man was a real treasure, and a real rarity- a fantasy writer that was writing literature as good as anything else out there.
I missed seeing him at Dragon Con a couple of years ago, what a mistake that was.
I highly recommend Peace; it's completely under the thrall of an unreliable narrator (as usual, right?) and the genre is... something like gothic fiction. Don't read too much internet analysis or you'll deprive yourself of some of the "aha moments" that happen during re-readings.
The Book of the New Sun is a real treasure. What other sci-fi/fantasy writer besides Wolfe (and Le Guin) managed to start AND FINISH such a satisfying, literary series? They happily sit on the same shelf as Proust and Ferrante in my home.
The Book of the New Sun and Fifth Head of Cerberus are probably my two favourite novels (or sets of novels for the former). Soldier of Mist/Arete was ok. The Island of Dr Death and Other Stories and Other Stories is also pretty good. I need to read more of his other material really. I love the layers in his books and that he doesn't give the reader everything up front.
I also read some of Wolfe's more recent books a couple of years ago when they showed up at the local library. An Evil Guest has a very surprising plot twist. Home Fires was interesting. The Land Across featured a narrator who seemed like an amoral sociopath early on, so much so that I need to re-read it again with skepticism towards the entire narrative.
I think I have plugged them here before, but I love THE WARRIOR KING and THE WIZARD KING. It's like Thor's story told in medias res. It's not only set in a mythological time, it's protagonist experiences the things that make myths of men. He is confused and concerned and trying to do his best or not at various points and it's a delight.
Michael Barnes wrote: There is no fantasy novel or series that is as dense, hallucinatory, baffling, and utterly profound as the Book of the New Sun. Its understated revelations are mindblowers, the keyhole view of of its world never seems like it is big enough to take in its vastness.
The Fifth Head of Cerebus is almost as good. Maybe better?
This man was a real treasure, and a real rarity- a fantasy writer that was writing literature as good as anything else out there.
I missed seeing him at Dragon Con a couple of years ago, what a mistake that was.
Oh man, I totally missed this. I have a complete hardback library set of Book of the New Sun and also have the coveted single hardback edition. I could have put these on Ebay and cleaned up (checks calendar) four years ago!
The Book of the New Sun is hallucinatory and amazing. I wish I could teach it in a single semester. So much reading.
I was introduced to Wolfe's writing in a college course (a Science Fiction lit class), but we used The Fifth Head of Cerberus. It was a damn good class, though. Probably one of the best I'd taken... Alfred Bester, Heinlein, PKD, Sturgeon, Pat Cadigan, Delany (Neveryon and lots of critical writing on SF), Lewis Padgett, Ballard, James Tiptree Jr, Joanna Russ, Cold Equations (Godwin), Heat Death of the Universe (Zoline). I ended up writing my senior thesis on SF.