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Lookout Cartridge (1974)

Tekijä: Joseph McElroy

Muut tekijät: Katso muut tekijät -osio.

JäseniäKirja-arvostelujaSuosituimmuussijaKeskimääräinen arvioMaininnat
1582171,636 (3.83)6
With "Lookout Cartridge," Joseph McElroy established a reputation as one of contemporary fiction's foremost innovators and deft observers into the fissures of modern society. It is a novel of dazzling intricacy, absorbing suspense, and the highest ambition: to redeem the great claim of paranoia on the American psyche. In trying to figure out just who is so threatened by an innocent piece of cinema verit filmed in collaboration with a friend, Cartwright finds himself at the heart of a mystery stretching from New York and London to Corsica and Stonehenge. With each new fact he gathers, both the intricacy of the syndicate arrayed against him and what his search will cost him become alarmingly clear.… (lisätietoja)
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näyttää 2/2
Lookout Cartridge resists analysis. It doesn't lend itself to objective models. It lacks a core and periphery. There is little distinction between its exterior and the insular. Hell, as the pages turn, the narrative gathers matter , but not really force.

Where would this kinesis go? We measure in terms of plot development. Within these pages that activity remains suspect.

As pages are read, certain detail accumulate.

Could we be more specific?

Okay, the myriad project of representing reality repeats during the course of this forward reading. The Mercator Projection, the Mayan calendar and the enigma of Stonehenge are featured. These matters are explored, ruminated. How do we afford the aspects of flux to the static? Film uses edits for its gestalt. Painitng uses perspective.

Okay but as narrative project, what actually happens?

Two guys make a film, one of them keeps a diary of the process. Suddenly matters have turned a corner. Something untoward appears to be afoot. Data is flashed both forward and back through the narrative sequence, providing links if not elucidation. McElroy said somewhere that Lookout Cartridge is a computer. It processes imputs.

The name of Richard Nixon appears throughout the narrative, though Dick doesn't haunt like in Gravity's Rainbow. Speaking of paranoiac aesthetics, I found Lookout Cartridge is more Caché than Three Days of the Condor.

3.5/5 Though this reflects my own limitations, not those of the novel.
( )
  jonfaith | Feb 22, 2019 |

Cartwright, middle-aged businessman of questionable repute, and his friend Dagger, both Americans living in London, decided to make a film together. They shot about 10 scenes of the film and Cartwright kept a written diary of the shooting. But before the film could be processed, someone broke into Dagger's flat and destroyed most of it. This is the basic premise, or what we know up front. What follows is an ever-widening gyre of Cartwright's investigation into the circumstances surrounding the film's destruction, cut in with first-person reports of the shooting of key scenes in the film. These reports are Cartwright's dictations of his diary entries to his teenage daughter Jenny, though Cartwright the narrator also supplements the text with his recollections, interjecting to note when something was or was not included in the diary. Cartwright's narration of his own investigation (told in past tense) is also fluid, with frequent shifts in time and place, fueled by the fact that he travels back and forth between New York City and various places in the UK, sometimes in the same day.

Cartwright employs a rolling metaphor of film cartridges to place the action in perspective for himself and for the reader ('you who have me'), to whom he makes occasional brief asides. He repeats things, intriguing things, that may or may not be red herrings, and may or may not be worth keeping track of in order to chip away at the mystery. Fragments of past events slow-reveal, sometimes adding up to a whole. Mysterious and menacing characters lurk on both sides of the Atlantic. The film becomes something more than a film. Conspiratorial threads appear. Everyone knows a little or a lot, but no one seems to know it all. At times the plot operates like an elaborate and maddening game of Telephone. Cartwright and Dagger are at odds, each thinking the other is trying to co-opt the film, each unaware of what the other knows. As characters, they are both difficult to pin down. Since Cartwright is narrating, we only see Dagger through his eyes, so this portrait is uncertain. Cartwright had an idealistic vision for the film ('taking other energy in process and using it for our own peaceful ends'), whereas Dagger's possible ulterior motives materialize over time as the hinge on which the suspense swings.

The story pivots on information and power, namely how information empowers those who will wield it. It delves into methods for information acquisition and transfer, and how to use information once acquired, particularly to obtain yet more information. It also underscores the dangers (including for the reader) of information that is incomplete or out of context, and the frustration in not knowing the value of certain information one has that others seem to want. At one point late in the book, Cartwright laments (brags?), 'Information theory? I had none.' It's clear he's only been winging it thus far, but it's hard not to cheer for a guy getting by on instinct and a little luck. ( )
3 ääni S.D. | Apr 5, 2014 |
näyttää 2/2
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Joseph McElroyensisijainen tekijäkaikki painoksetlaskettu
Marcellino, FredKansikuvataiteilijamuu tekijäeräät painoksetvahvistettu
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Englanninkielinen Wikipedia (2)

With "Lookout Cartridge," Joseph McElroy established a reputation as one of contemporary fiction's foremost innovators and deft observers into the fissures of modern society. It is a novel of dazzling intricacy, absorbing suspense, and the highest ambition: to redeem the great claim of paranoia on the American psyche. In trying to figure out just who is so threatened by an innocent piece of cinema verit filmed in collaboration with a friend, Cartwright finds himself at the heart of a mystery stretching from New York and London to Corsica and Stonehenge. With each new fact he gathers, both the intricacy of the syndicate arrayed against him and what his search will cost him become alarmingly clear.

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