Brian Catling is a poet, sculptor, painter, and performance artist. He makes installations and paints portraits of imagined Cyclops in egg tempera. Catling has had solo shows at The Serpentine Gallery, London; the Arnolfini in Bristol, England; the Ludwig Museum in Aachen, Germany; Hordaland Kunstnersentrum in Bergen, Norway; Project Gallery in Leipzig, Germany; and the Museum of Modern Art in Oxford, England.
“The English language has given birth to some great works of
unbounded vision and imagination, and here is another one. Is it
fantasy? I couldn’t care less. It’s a very sophisticated and subtle
exploration of the decadent, the primitive and the mythical. Many
books are said to be like nothing else, and aren’t, but Brian
Catling’s really is.” —Philip Pullman, The Guardian
“One of the most original works of visionary fiction since Peake or
Carpentier. . . . For all its page-turning story, it is a poet’s
novel, a serious piece of writing.”—Michael Moorcock, The
Guardian
“A dizzying trek into the dark heart of fantasy. . . . Catling’s
first foray into long-form fiction does not disappoint. Instead, it
feels like the midcareer highpoint of an established novelist, full
of lyrical subtlety, piercing clarity, and an understated
assurance. . . . Catling's plot and prose, like his setting, are
dreamlike and hyper-vivid. His frequent and liquid shifts in
point-of-view only add to that kaleidoscopic vision, and his
surrealistic style dovetails empathetically with the source of his
inspiration . . . . The Vorrh is not only a work of
alternative history, but of alternate literature; Catling builds
his imaginary story of the conception of Impressions of
Africa into his Joseph Conrad-esque voyage into the unknown. .
. .There are a staggering number of elements to juggle, and Catling
practically levitates them. . . . In Catling's world, a miraculous
healing touch becomes a plague of unchecked beneficence, where
primitive tribes of cannibals do not adhere to the racist
stereotypes of the time, and where angels must bury themselves
under the soil in order to sleep. None of these wonders is there
for show; they each play a part, sometimes pivotal and sometimes
peripheral, in the teeming conceptual ecosystem of The Vorrh.
. . . For all its eye-gouging, mind-bending spectacle, The
Vorrh makes room for hushed poignancy and philosophical heft.
. . . It's a testament to Catling's skill as a sculptor of words
that such otherworldly ideas and images not only connect, but
resonate to the bone.”—NPR.org
“An amazing, mind-expanding novel.”—Bookriot
“Catling’s novel reads like a long-lost classic of Decadent or
Symbolist literature, with that same sense of timelessness. It’s
peculiar, wildly imaginative, unafraid to transgress and get lost,
and is unlike anything I’ve ever read.” —Jeff VanderMeer, author of
The Southern Reach Trilogy
"A phosphorescent masterpiece. . . . Easily the current century’s
first landmark work of fantasy. . . . A brilliant and
sustained piece of invention which establishes a benchmark not just
for imaginative writing but for the human imagination in itself. .
. . Read this book, and marvel." --Alan Moore, author
of Watchmen and V for Vendetta
"Brian Catling is simply a genius. His writing is so extraordinary
it hurts, it makes me realize how little imagination I have."
—Terry Gilliam
“I am glad to have the book as a companion on my own dark quest.”
—Tom Waits
"A dazzling display of storytelling. . . . Readers who enjoy
the genre-blending novels of Felix Gilman (The Half-Made World,
2010) and David Mitchell (The Bone Clocks, 2014)—and are
comfortable with the violence of Jesse Bullington’s The Enterprise
of Death (2011)—will find themselves right at home
here."--Booklist
“Darkly imaginative. . . . Packed with striking images . . . real
beauty and power.”—Kirkus
“Richly textured. . . . Full of memorable imagery and
language.”—Publishers Weekly
"There are not many books that rearrange the molecules of your
being, turning your eyes inside out. The Vorrh, this saturnine
post-traumatic testament, is one of them. A work of genius." —Iain
Sinclair
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