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Despite the title, I anticipated that KILL THE MESSENGER would deliver nearly as much irony as depression.

The only words that resonated:

The birds told me
some
by going some by staying

and -

this wasted day
nothing
but this
 
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m.belljackson | Oct 12, 2022 |
Ordinarily, when a book is full of unresolved puzzles and loose ends, when its narrator is sexually insinuating without detail or description and when a book fails to end in a conventional way, I hate the book. Much of the OuLiPo literature and the hyper-saturated symbolist literature that “The Scorpions” sometimes resembles is also, as far as I’m concerned, supremely irritating. But I’m a sucker for unconventional detective fiction and lethal, arrogant, philandering eccentrics.

Kelly is also a talented, deliberate and sensitive prose stylist. I enjoyed, “Now no memorial of her act was left besides my own rapidly blurring memory of the open-lipped tension of triumph in her face as she’d taken the steaks under her wing, her quick stiff-kneed sumptuous walk away.” & “Cat fanciers, dog breeders, parakeet tenders, goldfish feeders, little they knew or cared how much of themselves they alienated to the animals in their charge. Beasts crave souls from men, suck those souls.” Kelly’s solid physical humor is a perfect antidote to the potentially eye-glazing details about astrology and numerology, just as the narrator’s libido is an ideal counterbalance to his ritual, cerebralized paganism.

I’m still incredulous that I judge Kelly to be successful in attempting exactly the sort of closure that he describes in the afterword, which is an especially helpful lubricant and apology for the book’s uncompromising end. The shrug of a conclusion is a smashing commentary on all of the novel’s ploys and titillations. It could be taken as a fond dismissal of recently popular forms of over-precious and over-wrought American experimental fiction.

Worth mentioning: it feels, in its oddness and pace, like a Murakami novel with a toxic protagonist.
3 vota
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fieldnotes | otra reseña | Jul 9, 2011 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
This is an odd sort of a book. It seems to be describing a case of UFO abduction in terms of a Native American shamanistic initiation. I am uncertain about that, being neither a shaman nor an abductee.
I was put off initially by the flowery diction of the narrator. I grew up not too far in space-time from when and where the protagonist grew up near the Delaware River. I assure you that nobody spoke like that in that region. It occurred to me that this is probably because the narrator is describing events of childhood after undergoing the transformative event, whatever it was.
I was unable to finish the book, but may try again later.
 
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bertilak | 12 reseñas más. | Feb 7, 2010 |
An exuberant, lyrical and highly-literate first novel featuring a larger-than-life book-collecting occult psychoanalyst and his Nautilus-like Rolls Royce on the track of The Scorpions, an occult group of conspirators that may or may not exist. The book is one-of-a-kind but contains elements that are also successfully carried off in The Crying of Lot 49, A Confederacy of Dunces, early DeLillo novels, Mike Hammer novels and Pale Fire. Amazing and all too brief.
5 vota
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slickdpdx | otra reseña | Oct 16, 2009 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
I received this awhile ago as an Early Reviewer title because I liked the surreality of the descriptive text. Unfortunately, once I'd gotten it, II couldn't read more than 5 pages - I brought it along to read while waiting for an exclusive film showing, and ended up passing it around and reading bits aloud to and with my friends, mocking it. The book takes itself far, far too seriously, and unless you're heavily into 'experimental' literature, and have never read or seen any mainstream science fiction, I doubt you'd like it. I ended up passing this along via bookmooch without making it to the end of the book
 
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ginskye | 12 reseñas más. | Jul 9, 2009 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
Before reading The Book From the Sky, I mistakenly read a couple of the reviews that were posted for it. None of them had very good things to say. Quite often I like books that others may consider off the wall so picked up the book expecting to, while not love it, not hate it.

Unfortunately, I wasn't even able to finish it. That's a very rare thing for me. I can usually slog through a book and get to the end. Couldn't do it with this one, nor would i recommend it to anyone else to try.
 
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shelbel100 | 12 reseñas más. | Jul 9, 2009 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
This book was incomprehensible at times, compelling at others, and always challenging. I think I finished it, but I'm not sure. I'd recommend it to anyone looking to push their limits.

I wish I'd have been high while reading it and/or had someone beautiful reading it to me.½
1 vota
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lundblad | 12 reseñas más. | Jun 4, 2009 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
This is one of those books that made me think about genre. It's become quite common among authors of speculative fiction (SF, fantasy, horror, etc.) to claim that good SF is good literature and vice versa -- and on some level, I agree -- but the thing is, my experiences tells me that the various subgenres of SF, like poetry, are not like "mainstream" or "literary" fiction.

In some ways, of course, this is a blessing: once something has to exhibit its own literary worthiness, you find a certain tendency toward turgidity, towards what someone I knew online once diagnosed as "a serious case of serious." But it's more than that: it's the fact that in genre writing, if you don't know the genre or are unfamiliar with it, you're likely to start writing bad genre.

I think this is more true of some subgenres, and less true of others. Specifically, I think that the barriers to entry into SF are higher than they are into the subgenres of fantasy and horror. Fantasy writers might go up in arms when they hear me say this, but a simple moment of reflection will reveal that fantasy-like and horror-like writing has been around -- and widespread -- for ages, whilst SF is a much newer development. As well, there are no hard-and-fast rules of magic that need to be followed: an intelligent, imaginative fledgling author may happen to reproduce the same imaginary system of magical rules that some other author created in a book or series years before, but at least nobody can corner her for getting the rules "wrong," something to which SF authors are constantly subject.

As well, it seems to me that the high focus on the "neat idea" factor in SF -- the focus on what Darko Suvin calls "the novum," meaning whatever is newfangled and different from our present, but, at least in most of the SF I read, also plausible to soem degree -- is so much more pronounced than it is in fantasy. In fantasy or horror, you don't have people saying, "That's implausible!", or at least you don't have them saying that about your fantastical elements; you might have them say, "That's boring!" but a truly inspired or truly skilled writer can finesse that. It's much harder to finesse the problem when you're dealing with an audience that is not only, as mentioned above, likely to call you on it when you get the physics wrong, but also likely to compile a list of novels in which your so-called innovative idea was first tossed into the SF boxing ring.

That's not to say SF is harder to write than fantasy -- I find it much easier than any form of fantasy to write, because of the way my mind works through narratives and so on -- but it is to say that when people come at genre from without, they're probably swinging with a lower handicap in fantasy or horror than they are in SF. It's still hard for someone to come in from outside and write an outstanding fantasy novel, or an excellent horror novel, but I suspect that in SF, it's hard for someone to come into the genre from outside of it and write even a passable novel.

Robert Kelley is a poet and a professor at Bard College. I don't know if he reads SF regularly, much less if he's up-to-date on the field. HE has published more than fifty books, which means he obviously must be a competent writer. And in fact, there are a number of passages in The Book from the Sky that display his skill as a writer a poet. But if you look at the publisher's blurb, you might have some idea of why it didn't work for me:

“I’m on my way back. I was one of the first they took away.” So begins Robert Kelly’s remarkable science fiction novel about a literally divided self. “I” is Billy, the book’s protagonist, a boy who is captured by a group of aliens who take him to a cave and meticulously, if seemingly by caprice, remove his “young pure smokeless lungs” and other internal organs to replace them with two gray squirrels, a live hawk, a shoe, and a variety of other bizarre objects.

This is, it appears, a poet's idea of interesting biomodification. To me, though, it just rings hollow: it's a metaphor for something, I guess... or maybe it's just a list, one of those evocative lists that poets know they can rely on to build up a metaphorical field, a kind of tension and mood. To me, though, it falls flat compared with, oh, something that could actually happen. Not that Kelly seems to intend it to be read literalistically, or scientifically, or, well, in the way we tend to read SF; but rather, that his "aliens" could just as easily have been mythic Native American forest-spirits, or a band of fae come to kidnap him and hold him hostage in the UnSeelie Court. The two gray squirrels, the live hawk, the shoe, and other bizarre objects could as easily have been clockwork mechanisms and discarded music boxes, or fluids of different colors in various little perfume vials.

In other words, the SFnal content in the story -- up to where I could read no longer -- is wholly arbitrary and wholly interchangeable with any other fantastical content. The blurb goes on:

Billy’s body and mind are spun off into a curious twin, one whose adventures Billy is forced by his captors to watch and try to make sense of—not a simple task when he sees his doppelgänger stealing everything from him: body, name, family, his beloved Eileen. Complicating matters, and forcing Billy deeper into his ironic journey of self, is a mysterious pamphlet called “The Book from the Sky,” written by what may be yet another variation of Billy himself, Brother William. This stunningly imaginative work, echoing the late novels of Iris Murdoch and the fantasies of Robert Charles Wilson and Jonathan Stroud while remaining inimitably Kelly’s own, offers adventurous readers a “cabinet of wonders” not unlike the body of his beleaguered young hero.

What you really end up with, then, is the use of SF as a kind of mouthpiece for issues of literary obsession concern: a divided self, alien abduction, the act of writing itself in the form of the excerpts for which the book is named.

The problem, to me, might be that I am an SF reader (and writer). It may be that, knowing too much about the genre myself -- though I am not nearly as well-read as any number of fans -- I cannot help but hold this book up beside a tradition that it appears to attempt to mine, yet fails to reflect in any substantial manner; maybe this is unfair, as Kelly, a poet, surely believes he's turning these SFnal tropes in on themselves, using them in a poetical manner just as he might a modern retelling of ancient epics. Surely Kelly doesn't think he's written an SF novel? He doesn't describe it that way in the interview I found online. But as an SF reader, I can say that he skates quite close enough to come off as someone who really just doesn't get SF.

What I've noticed, looking around online, is that people who are actually into SF have tended not to say anything about this book, or to acknowledge Kelly's skill while complaining that the book is muddled, confusing, or just plain bad SF. Whereas people who seem to be into poetry, into mainstream literary fiction ( not just pretentious stuff, but the good stuff too) seem to be quite enthusiastic about it. If you're into both SF and poetry, like me, then you'll probably find yourself bouncing from one side -- Wow, this guy can write! -- to the other -- What the hell did the aliens put two live squirrels into his abdomen for?

So I guess that's a pretty good guide of who will like or dislike the book: if you're into SF, this is likely not your bag. If you're not so into SF, but like reading poetry, this might be a novel for you. This is SF the way a famous and pretty good poet would write it: which is to say, it's maybe not SF for anyone who reads SF.
4 vota
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gordsellar | 12 reseñas más. | Dec 13, 2008 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
I've struggled and struggled with this book. I rarely give up on a book but I just can't finish this one. It's a really odd little book. The writing style is a bit weird and I just can't figure out where the author is going. I hate to but will defer to others who managed to finish it for better descriptions.
 
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Mantra | 12 reseñas más. | Sep 16, 2008 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
I don't get it. I mean, I consider myself a pretty smart guy. Maybe even smarter than the average bear, but there are likely those who would argue that. And I really like science fiction, and weird things that go bump in the night. And I really like abstract tales that take time to coalesce into something firm, complete. That said... I don't get it.

To be fair, let me start out by saying that there are passages in The Book from the Sky that are simply stunning. There are moments where the images that Robert Kelly manipulates quite simply took my breath away. The manner in which he constructed and manipulated his prose (not to mention the poems published on his website) has convinced me to become familiar with more of his poetry. Which gets at the heart of the issue for me as far as The Book from the Sky is concerned.

Regardless of the prose's beauty, the story just isn't there. It is so filled with heightened language and abstractions, that I have no clear idea what it is about, or what Kelly wants me to take away. Even the jacket text on the back cover doesn't seem to give an accurate summation of the book I read. I got the basics... struggle with identity, boy meets girl, more struggle with identity, yadda yadda... it was actually fairly formulaic as far as that goes. But the presentation so muddied the waters that anything that could have really raised the bar and set it apart from others that use the same formula was lost in the poetry. It never coalesced into something that helps explain what has happened over the course of the previous pages, and what, if any, stance the characters need or seem to take on the multitude of issues.

Rather, I felt incredibly cheated by the shift in POV at the end of the book. A wonderful little relationship had been established, perhaps the single element that made the finishing the book even possible for me, and the change in POV reveals information that casts everything into doubt. The relationship, the state of mind of the characters, the trustworthiness of the narrators, everything was turned upside-down.

There was also a problem, I think, of trying to explore too much. Kelly broaches some heavy topics in here, and he does so in rapid fire succession. Religion, government, identity, creation, procreation, evolution, reincarnation... He fires these off in succession without ever really give his characters time to weigh in on or consider these issues. Neither does he give the reader an opportunity to sit back, say "woah," and take a breath and think about what he just lay out there on the table. Instead, he changes topic and moves immediately on to something else.

I really wanted to like The Book from the Sky, but in the end it just seemed that it was too much style and not enough substance. There is poetry in Kelly's prose, to be sure, but the story was too far buried in the poetry for me to enjoy.½
2 vota
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RobbFlynn | 12 reseñas más. | Sep 10, 2008 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
This book begins with an intriguing and surreal alien abduction, setting up a David Lynch or X-Files-type split consciousness plot. It then moves through a loosely related set of incidents in which one narrator’s mental health is questioned (in a way that brings to mind Zen and the Art of Motor Cycle Maintenance). The book of the title, the focus of a new religion followed by some of the characters, makes up the last third of the novel. It is never clear, however, how much of that book’s content is meant to be tongue in cheek, and how much is meant to be truly profound. Along the way, the author loops and lopes through thought-provoking digressions on the linguistic power of naming and knowing. His skills at poetry shine through in those sections. Other digressions, however--ruminations by numerous characters on the emotional connections forged through sexual relationships--are poorly integrated. The story is ultimately one that questions how much we know about ourselves. Individually, a number of facets of the story stir up fascinating thoughts. But while the final scenes show attempts to tie up some of the more powerful images from the beginning of the novel, by then the power of the story has dwindled away.
 
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Ling.Lass | 12 reseñas más. | Sep 8, 2008 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
For a book that touches on "science fiction," the main character has surprisingly little understanding of science. Wonderful things happen, but are never explained in any science-like manner. On the other hand, this book is filled with charming monologues and word play. I recommend reading this book aloud or digesting it slowly, like reading a poetry book.
 
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lisa2 | 12 reseñas más. | Aug 31, 2008 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
Some spoilers below ***
I received this book via the Early Reviewer program and was excited to read a science fiction/science fantasy novel by an accomplished writer. This book was my first encounter with Robert Kelly, and I had not previously read any of his works, so I felt I might have an uncommon approach to The Book From the Sky.
Humanist and poetic, I greatly enjoyed pages 20 through 220 (of about 240). The initial pages, as a preface, seemed impossible to understand, but made some sense when the book was complete. The majority of the book that explored human feelings (especially desire) and self-knowledge was interesting to me, some of it fascinating. As the book approached the end, the "humanist" feel of the writing was replaced with a new-age/christian feel and I strongly feared this a harbinger of a christ/sacrificial ending. Most of the novel was beautifully written. I was absolutely disappointed with the ending of the book; for only then was I convinced that I had read a book whose messages were so mixed and contradictory, that it had no message for me. Two stars for inspired descriptions on several pages. I disagree with a former reviewer that the book is worth reading by its literary merit. Leave the book alone unless you feel you have to read it or like being confused and manipulated as a reader.
1 vota
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psybre | 12 reseñas más. | Aug 25, 2008 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
It takes three things for communication to occur across time and distance between an author and a reader. The author. A book. And a reader. In this case we have all three. Robert Kelly. The Book From the Sky. And me, the reader. Very little, if any, communication came to pass.

After finishing, I have no idea what the author was trying to tell me. It wasn't the words that were difficult. Very few of them would need to be looked up in a dictionary by an average reader. The majority of the words are just common ordinary words. The author is a poet and did play with sentence structure a bit, but not much. That wasn't the cause of my not understanding. I could guess at the author's intentions. A statement of human consciousness. A comment on mass consumer culture. Some kind of Native American spirituality. But all would be shot in the dark attempts at explanation.

I'm sure in the author's mind his book is crystal clear and presented in an approachable manner to the reader. Somehow, it wasn't so to this reader. I truly don't know if it's a work of genius or a muddled pile of paper. I'll split the rating right down the middle and give the book two and a half stars for being obfuscatory and myself two and a half stars for faulty comprehension.½
1 vota
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VisibleGhost | 12 reseñas más. | Aug 16, 2008 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
A young boy is abducted by aliens who perform surreal and unlikely physical alterations on him and spirit him away with them, leaving a duplicate on Earth in his place. Off on some alien planet, he indulges in rambling philosophical musings for fifty pages or so, then returns to Earth several decades later to offer the benefits of his extraterrestrial enlightenment to the world in general and his unknowing alter ego in particular.

The prose is good (if perhaps a bit too self-consciously literary), and there are some very well-rendered poetic images and occasional glimmerings of something approaching genuine insight, but for the most part the metaphysical meanderings that make up the substance of the novel stuck me as incoherent, unengaging, and often downright irritating. The end result is kind of interesting, but I can't say I really recommend it.½
 
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bragan | 12 reseñas más. | Aug 15, 2008 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
(Early reviewers book.) The Book from the Sky is nominally about Billy, a boy who is abducted by aliens and replaced by a simulacrum of himself. In reality, this plot mostly takes a back seat to the author's meditations on the nature of the self (which are often interesting) and a whole bunch of epigrams (which generally aren't). People who actually like magic realism would probably enjoy this more than I did; I found it to be, on a local level, alternately fascinating and infuriating, and, on a global level, not particularly coherent.
 
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tortoise | 12 reseñas más. | Aug 13, 2008 |
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