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tessjvl's review against another edition
adventurous
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? It's complicated
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
3.75
daja57's review against another edition
3.0
All the usual hallmarks of a Burroughs novel: the young men having gay sex, the violence and mutilation, the weird chimeric monstrosities, recurring characters and episodes from other Burroughs novels, the fractured narrative, the sense that you are somewhere in between a trip on LSD (sometimes good, sometimes nightmarish), gay erotic fantasy and a 1950s science fiction B-movie. And the sense of deja-vu is heightened because Burroughs reuses characters and events and scenes from other novels.
As the blurb says, Burroughs has a style that is "utterly unique in twentieth-century literature" though there are echoes of other writers. The fractured, chaotic narrative (although Place of Dead Roads has a more linear narrative than much of Burroughs's oeuvre) and the gay leitmotif remind me of Jean Genet, for example The Thief's Journal. The inventiveness and the science fiction style fantasies remind me of J G Ballard, for example Millennium People or High Rise but especially The Unlimited Dream Company; J G Ballard was an admirer of Burroughs. The headlong reel of the narrative reminds me of work by Jack Kerouac, for example On The Road. And other authors that seem to belong in this area include Tony Hanania (Eros Island, Homesick) and Alexander Trocchi (Cain's Book).
The fractured narrative is a result of Burroughs use of a 'cut up' technique, as if he has taken a linear narrative and deliberately rearranged it. This gives it a sense of bricolage but also imparts qualities of madness. The obsession with magic and the paranoia of alien invasion add to the irrationality. It was written when the author was 69 at the end of a life repeatedly interrupted by drug addiction. It does not seem to be the product of a completely sane mind.
Which makes much of it virtually unreadable. The characters are about as real as they are in 1950s Hollywood science friction B-movies and, as mentioned above, there is no coherent narrative so it can scarcely be said to have a plot. There are rants against the church, the English, the class system ...
So why bother? Because it is so different. And because there are occasional flashes of wonder. "Kim thought maybe he would study medicine and become a doctor, but while he liked diseases he didn't like sick people. They complained all the time. They were petulant and self-centered and boring." (Part One, p 25). "Kim now realises they they can take over bodies and minds and use them for their purposes. So why do they always take over stupid, bigoted people or people who are retarded or psychotic?" (Part One, p 92). "Mary could say 'no' quicker than any woman Kim ever knew and none of her no's ever meant yes." (Part Two, p 113). "Should auld acquaintance be forgot ... In many cases, yes." (Part Two, p 121). "It always happens, the big cattle men go soft in the outhouse." (Part Two, p 155)
However, a lot of it is virtually unreadable.
As the blurb says, Burroughs has a style that is "utterly unique in twentieth-century literature" though there are echoes of other writers. The fractured, chaotic narrative (although Place of Dead Roads has a more linear narrative than much of Burroughs's oeuvre) and the gay leitmotif remind me of Jean Genet, for example The Thief's Journal. The inventiveness and the science fiction style fantasies remind me of J G Ballard, for example Millennium People or High Rise but especially The Unlimited Dream Company; J G Ballard was an admirer of Burroughs. The headlong reel of the narrative reminds me of work by Jack Kerouac, for example On The Road. And other authors that seem to belong in this area include Tony Hanania (Eros Island, Homesick) and Alexander Trocchi (Cain's Book).
The fractured narrative is a result of Burroughs use of a 'cut up' technique, as if he has taken a linear narrative and deliberately rearranged it. This gives it a sense of bricolage but also imparts qualities of madness. The obsession with magic and the paranoia of alien invasion add to the irrationality. It was written when the author was 69 at the end of a life repeatedly interrupted by drug addiction. It does not seem to be the product of a completely sane mind.
Which makes much of it virtually unreadable. The characters are about as real as they are in 1950s Hollywood science friction B-movies and, as mentioned above, there is no coherent narrative so it can scarcely be said to have a plot. There are rants against the church, the English, the class system ...
So why bother? Because it is so different. And because there are occasional flashes of wonder. "Kim thought maybe he would study medicine and become a doctor, but while he liked diseases he didn't like sick people. They complained all the time. They were petulant and self-centered and boring." (Part One, p 25). "Kim now realises they they can take over bodies and minds and use them for their purposes. So why do they always take over stupid, bigoted people or people who are retarded or psychotic?" (Part One, p 92). "Mary could say 'no' quicker than any woman Kim ever knew and none of her no's ever meant yes." (Part Two, p 113). "Should auld acquaintance be forgot ... In many cases, yes." (Part Two, p 121). "It always happens, the big cattle men go soft in the outhouse." (Part Two, p 155)
However, a lot of it is virtually unreadable.
angus_mckeogh's review against another edition
3.0
Definitely more accessible than some of his other fiction. Doesn’t seem to have been exposed to as much of the “cut up” technique as other stuff I’ve read. Which basically means as the narrative continues you don’t keep running into nonsensical, random additions to the text like “the smell of anal mucus”. That being said it was still ultra bizarre. Sort of a western science-fiction mash up with some disparate meanderings in the storyline. As an aside there was a mention of an anti-vaxxer group as pertains to smallpox and the narrator just says “we let them catch the disease and die”. And the novel was written in 1984.
unrealpunk's review against another edition
4.5
mutters of rebellion everywhere like heat lightning
If Cities of the Red Night was crafted to garner acclaim from the gatekeepers of 'true literature', The Place of Dead Roads seems crafted to make those gatekeepers regret that acclaim. Instead of masking the amorality and idiocy of his heroes, and that of his own authorial voice, he draws attention to it, challenging the reader to interrogate their unconscious sympathies and concepts of heroism — what we're willing to overlook when manipulated by a POV narrative and a few well-chosen words. Typically enigmatic Burroughsian self-subversion, taking things too far, and then, when you're about to give up, he somehow turns it into art, something completely new and transfixing. The hallucinatory scenes towards the end are some of Burroughs' most indelible and horrific. And it's funny! Such an incredibly original mind.
colepsmith42's review against another edition
4.0
Better than Cities of the Red Night, which I remembered being my favorite from the trilogy. More straightforward, while also somehow being more strange and disconnected. I like the idea of traveling through South America as a metaphor for traveling through the land of the dead. Burroughs really indulges in his peccadillos here, which makes it into a sort of obscured self-portrait, at least of what he thinks about himself towards the end of his life.
sunhat_cloudbelt's review against another edition
adventurous
dark
funny
fast-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
5.0
ae_schulz's review against another edition
challenging
dark
reflective
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? It's complicated
- Loveable characters? No
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
3.75
A philosophically dense book that often pulls the rug out from under the reader. A constant grotesque reflection of the flaws and shortcomings of society and the zeitgeist. Difficult characters to relate to our root for but that is the point I would say.
spaceisavacuum's review against another edition
dark
relaxing
slow-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? No
4.75
‘The Place of Dead Roads’ had originally been called ‘The Johnson Family’, in which the appendix of Queer he elaborates… “Just when you think the earth is exclusively populated by sh*ts, you meet a Johnson.” … ‘A Johnson honors his obligations. His word is good and he is a good man to do business with.’ The book meanwhile is about Kim Carsons, a reference to Kipling I suppose… he’s incurably intelligent, the renowned shootist, and inhabits a world exclusively made of Men. There are no women in this book. It’s a bit of Lord of the Flies. Burroughs in fact imagined a reverse-Amazonian world, in which masculinity, misogynist, male dominated world was his bread and butter. Make no mistake about it, Burroughs was the very definition of toxic masculinity, and he was very unapologetic about it.
“Being a Johnson is not a question of secret rites but of belonging to a certain species. “He’s a Johnson” means that he is one of us.”
Kim Carsons meanwhile is just navigating through life, facing challenges and tests from on high, he’s an alien here. (Kim will change her sex of course.) Kim is a writer of sorts, having published a book entitled ¿Quien Es? and contemplating that she wouldn’t mind being reborn a Mexican. “And the immortality of a writer is to be taken literally.” Burroughs elaborates on such enlightening topics as the anti-vaccination cultists at the turn of the century, art that attempts the impossible [this should be all things art], her wild band of picturesque outlaws called ‘the Wild Fruits’, and, in bullet points:
5. “The Industrial Revolution, with it’s overpopulation and emphasis on quantity rather than quality, has given them a vast reservoir of stupid bigoted uncritical human hosts. The rule of the majority is to their advantage since the majority can always be manipulated.”
Kim Carsons feels like she doesn’t quite fit in in this world. Much as Burroughs never did. Burroughs early neighbours were the Johnson Family, who were an upright sort of people who didn’t cross the line. Burroughs was anything but. But I don’t think the Johnsons ever gave him any trouble.
“Being a Johnson is not a question of secret rites but of belonging to a certain species. “He’s a Johnson” means that he is one of us.”
Kim Carsons meanwhile is just navigating through life, facing challenges and tests from on high, he’s an alien here. (Kim will change her sex of course.) Kim is a writer of sorts, having published a book entitled ¿Quien Es? and contemplating that she wouldn’t mind being reborn a Mexican. “And the immortality of a writer is to be taken literally.” Burroughs elaborates on such enlightening topics as the anti-vaccination cultists at the turn of the century, art that attempts the impossible [this should be all things art], her wild band of picturesque outlaws called ‘the Wild Fruits’, and, in bullet points:
5. “The Industrial Revolution, with it’s overpopulation and emphasis on quantity rather than quality, has given them a vast reservoir of stupid bigoted uncritical human hosts. The rule of the majority is to their advantage since the majority can always be manipulated.”
Kim Carsons feels like she doesn’t quite fit in in this world. Much as Burroughs never did. Burroughs early neighbours were the Johnson Family, who were an upright sort of people who didn’t cross the line. Burroughs was anything but. But I don’t think the Johnsons ever gave him any trouble.
arthurbdd's review against another edition
5.0
Hallucinatory Western cross-fertilised with a depiction of a vast chaos magic cult. Full review: https://fakegeekboy.wordpress.com/2021/12/20/burroughs-nightmare-geography/