I began Vertigo in 2007 primarily as a vehicle for writing about W.G. Sebald and the history of fiction and poetry that have photographs embedded as part of the author's original text. Now I also write about a broader range of books that interest me. You can see a dozen or so of the posts I like best (from more than 600) by clicking on the My Favorite Posts tab. And check out my yearly Reading Log, where I write a short paragraph about every book I read. The Categories list below represents only a handful of the topics covered in this blog. To see if an author, book, or topic has been discussed somewhere on Vertigo, use the Search field, which is found below the Categories listing. At the Downloadable Bibliography tab above, you can download an extensive bibliography of more than 700 books of Photo-Embedded Fiction & Poetry from the 1890s to the present, plus a full Author/Artist Index. To contact me, just leave a comment at any post and I will answer. Follow me at @vertigoterry.bsky.social
In addition to W.G. Sebald, there are several writers that I have written about multiple times on Vertigo over the last two decades, writers whose books I have found to be consistently worthy of deep and multiple readings. They are (in alphabetical order): Sergio Chejfec, Don Mee Choi, Teju Cole, Dorothee Elmiger, Mathias Énard, Julian Gracq, Esther Kinsky, Wolfgang Koeppen, Micheline Aharonian Marcom, Javier Marías, Joseph McElroy, Patrick Modiano, David Peace's Red Riding Quartet), Ricardo Piglia, Ann Quin, and Enrique Vila-Matas.
Apr 29
Offensive Poison: The Box Man
Kobo Abe’s narrators tend to talk to their readers with a seductively familiar voice, just a couple of pals talking about, well, being a box man, for example.
And before you know it you’re being led down strange alleyways, into odd corners of the city that you previously overlooked. In Kobo Abe’s novel The Box Man, first published in Japan in 1973, then in English in 1974, the world, as Alice remarked, becomes curiouser and curiouser. Maybe you secretly want to become a box man. If that’s the case, then there is a chapter for you: “Instructions for Making a Box.” The Box Man is an unlikely blend of theater (many of the chapter titles allude directly to the theater), police procedurals (complete with various “affidavits”), and self-reflexive postmodernism (one chapter is aptly titled “In Which It Is a Question of the Sullen Relationship Between the I Who Am Writing and the I Who Am Being Written About”).
“A box man possesses some offensive poison about him.” He undergoes a willful metamorphosis that permits him to see the world differently. But the box man’s vision comes with a cost. His freedom and his confinement are one and the same. “A box man’s eyes cannot be deceived. Looking out from the box, he sees through the lies and the secret intentions concealed behind the scenery.” The box man is also, apparently, a photographer and eight of his photographs are reproduced in the novel, accompanied by short prose poem-like captions. His photographs remind me of some of the more surreptitiously-taken images from Robert Frank’s The Americans. Their contents clue us into the state of mind of the box man but do not directly reference the plot of the book.