Archive | July, 2010

Forty-seven signs of the Apocalypse (#42)

From the Book of Renovations:

Computer in a beaverAnd in End Times there shall be many False Prophets, and they shall be Legion, and they shall learn of a magical land called Internet.

One of these False Prophets will provide the people with Devices that allow them unfettered access to the land called Internet.

And others will not be pleased by the shape of these Doodads, and devise all methods of making them more Pleasing To The Eye. They shall put these Thingamabobs into the Skin of Animals.

They will dance and sing around the Blue Light of their Unholy Instruments, and regale each other with tales of Beaver they have Split and Stuffed with Parts of their Devices. And rodents will become unto them as chieftains, and there will be great confusion.

Alltop loves a little split beaver. Originally published May 2007.

Paranoia in Perspective: The Vicious Circulation of Dr. Catastrope

the vicious circulation of dr. catastrope cover imageAfter reading The Vicious Circulation of Dr. Catastrope: A Polemical Ensemble, I felt very much like washing my brain.

Not that my cerebellum was polluted by the book, but more that it was now stuffed with vivid language and portmanteaulogy hitherto unfamiliar to the grey, spongy organ. Also, it was itchy. I think I’ve caught mental crabs from its infected prose.

I suspect this is Faucher’s intention, in writing what is meant to a cathartic, carcinogenic polemic, or perhaps a parody of the polemic, for a polemic is meant to establish the superiority of a point of view. The polemic has a long tradition, dating back to Cicero, and is associated with the writings of Voltaire, Neitzche, and in the last century with such masters as Henry Miller and Hemmingway. Yes, its a vicious satire, but don’t make the mistake of thinking this book is a traditional novel. It uses some of the forms of novel – there is a narrator, for example, of whom we shall speak later – but it is not driven by narrative. It is driven by bile; hilarious at times, excruciating at others; Faucher is a master of the comic insult. The demented rant to end all rants.

The book follows the ravings, harangues, bombast, self-pitying bravado — the polemic — of four individuals, stitched together by a Rabelaisian narrator – to whit, a bawdy, satirical bastard who is full of shit, but funny as hell. The four lunatics telling their various tales of woe are Dr. Catastrope, a medical doctor and author unjustly imprisoned for owning kiddie porn; Francois Coerlourde, a cantankerous old man and vile neighbour, French in upbringing and disposition, but sadly exiled in a part of New Orleans where people care about their lawns; Dr. Jonkil Calembour, the most deranged of the four, who is an academic literally at fisticuffs with his colleagues; and the quartet is rounded out by the somewhat sympathetic yet also paranoia-afflicted once-nearly-famous crooner, Vincent (Don Schixote.) It seems wrong not to include Vincent’s dog in this cast of characters, simply because his voice is one of the saddest and most heartbreaking of the book.

Their four stories told, the four and the ham-fisted Narrator are brought together for a little discussion. It does not go well. Incidentally, the Narrator has been called many things including, to quote:

A miser of description
A toilsome narrative voice
An inveterate listmaker
A hackish dwarf
A purveyor of literary emesis…

Such is the virtuosity of Faucher’s insult-machine. At the risk of having the some of the same epithets hurled at me, I would like to suggest that in the post-Vicious Circulation world, it only makes sense to institute the Faucher Scale of measuring insults, and of course, these would fall into the categories suggested by this book:

A Narration: a mild insult
A Vincent: somewhat hurtful
A Coerlourde: like having a large-fingered fisherman pull your nosehairs
A Catastrope: an insult so powerful, friends and neighbors stop speaking to you
A Calembour: a howling, bone-splitting ego-bash , or as it may become more popularly known: “I was Jonkilled.”

So if you enjoy spicy language, gut-busting turns of phrase, and are not afraid of paranoia, I recommend you take a look. If you need strong narrative, and are perturbed by the exclamation mark, I’d suggest you think twice before cracking its covers, but you’ll be missing a bit of virtuoso writing if you do. It is also an excellent way to put one’s own paranoia in perspective.

Available on Amazon.com and as a Kindle Edition.

In the interest of full disclosure, I should note that Faucher’s book is published by the phoenix of the publisher of Marvellous Hairy, and that we’re colleagues at UWO.

Forty-Seven Signs of the Apocalypse (#43)

From the Book of Bolt-Action Lamentations

Pink pistolAnd lo, there will be a place in the world where the mothers and daughters of Men Wearing Orange shall be tempted by Weapons.

And a time will come that they shall no longer resist the Call of the Weapons, for they shall be Pink. And Adorable. And Too Cute To Be Believed.

And the daughters and mothers of the Men Wearing Orange shall purchase of the weapons and they shall Revel in the Bolt-Action Fury and they shall go unto the forest and hunt of the deer and the bear and the occasional Husband.

Alltop likes theirs rainbow-colored. Newsy Proof: Pretty powerful in pink. Originally published September 2007.

Forty-seven Signs of the Apocalypse (#44)

From the Book of Mustelids

Giant Badger of the ApocalypseAnd before the World is scourged by the Mother of Harlots, there will be a time when a swampy town south of Babylon will be ravaged by giant, man-eating weasels.

These Honeyed Badgers of Great Size and Swiftness shall have the strength of the bear, the nose of a monkey and the cunning of a politician. They shall be fearless, and they shall be released upon the people of Swampy Town by invaders from a tiny island populated by savages with bad teeth.

And lo! Many of these savages will hail from upland regions of their foggy island — a place where they distill the Water of Life, and torture their enemies with bags of air and pipes, and wear skirts even though they be men — and it is these Mustelid Scotti that shall hide the Ginormous Badgers of Armageddon in their furry man-pouches and set them against the people of Swampy Town.

The Great Badgers will be fearless, and rend cow, and sheep, and they will gnaw on the leg bones of the people Swampy Town. Or bite their bums.

Newsy proof: Giant Badgers Terrorize Basra. Originally published July 2007.

Forty-seven Signs of the Apocalypse (#45)

From the Book of Libations

Forty-seven signs of the apocalypse (#45) -- wine bottleAnd in this time, there will be a shadowy group who terrorize a distant land filled with fragrant cheeses and even more fragrant people. And they shall be Craven, these men of evil intent, and they shall wear masks made of sheep’s cloth, though they own no ungulates.

Verily, they will be misguided followers of the Prophet Noah, and will grow grapes, and turn their juice into wine, and bottle it, and then market it at modest profit. And when middle men and usurious shopkeepers import inferior vintages from the remote sandy lands of Kalif and Far Australis prices will drop, and the Craven shall be wroth.

And they shall don their heads with the hair of sheep, and they shall threaten the Holy with Violence, and the distant land of fragrant cheeses and even more fragrant people will live in dread.

Yea, they shall have inexpensive wine, but there will be fear.

Alltop loves it some ripple. Newsy proof from the BBC: Wine Terrorism| Photo by dailydog. Originally published June 2007.

Forty-Seven Signs of the Apocalypse (#46)

From the Book of Libations

Margarita with mayonaiseAnd so it will be that in the Land of Nippon, where everything is tiny and strange, a Generation of Great Wickedness will come of age. The malefic children will have purchasing power, tablets of credit and sheaves of gold that they wave in the air and so, control the actions of others through the Harlot Commerce.

Verily, these Foul Progeny of the People of Nippon will have Strange Ideas. They shall worship the False God Mayo Knais; raw fish will become unclean with the droppings of the False God’s Overflowing Jar of Evil. And it will be unnatural.

They will use the Condiment of Mayo Knaise with alcohol, and dance, naked except for Deliciously Evil mixture of egg and vinegar, which they have rubbed on themselves with great Wooden Spoons of Sin.

Newsy proof: Mayo margarita anyone? Originally published August 2007.