The Golden Age

The Golden Age

Translated by Andrew Oakland

The Golden Age is a fantastical travelogue in which a modern-day Gulliver writes a book about a civilization he once encountered on a tiny island in the Atlantic. The islanders seem at first to do nothing but sit and observe the world, and indeed draw no distinction between reality and representation, so that a mirror image seems as substantial to them as a person (and vice versa); but the center of their culture is revealed to be "The Book," a handwritten, collective novel filled with feuding royal families, murderous sorcerers, and narrow escapes. Anyone is free to write in "The Book," adding their own stories, crossing out others, or even ap- pending "footnotes" in the form of little paper pouches full of extra text—but of course there are pouches within pouches, so that the story is impossible to read "in order," and soon begins to overwhelm the narrator's orderly treatise.

Details

Title The Golden Age
Author Michal Ajvaz
Translated by Andrew Oakland
Title First Published 20 April 2010
Format Paperback
Nb of pages 336 p.
ISBN-10 1564785785
ISBN-13 9781564785787
Publication Date 20 April 2010
Nb of pages 336
Dimensions 5.5 x 8 in.
List Price $14.95
 

Excerpt

1
The second journey





Whenever I told my friends about the island in the Atlantic Ocean where in my travelling days I spent almost three years, it often happened that one of them would ask me to submit a written report on this little-known island which is known to its inhabitants by no name and which travellers through the ages gave a name according to superficial impressions, moods of nostalgia and the need to flatter the families of their rulers. I would be vexed by the thought of writing of a society whose mores and pleasures I barely understood even when I was living among them (although I succeeded during my stay in catching every sickness of its spirit). It seemed to me more agreeable and more considerate to this place to accord it the fate of other landscapes I passed through, simply to look on contentedly as its contours gradually dissolved in a haze created by a mix of memory, forgetting, and dream, a radiant mist which softens shapes, leaving phantoms of sense to wander among them, and soaks them with the breath of a conciliation which perhaps has its basis in fallacy and the long useless. I thought it perfectly appropriate for the island to live on only in the form of nameless echoes which are stirred in gestures, muted tones resonating in the meaning of words and utterances, phantom-like faces which flit past in the contours of things perceived, when the fluttering of time unlooses memories and their liquid quintessence seeps into the landscape of the present.
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Reviews

Press Reviews

Hipster Book Club
The Golden Age . . . leave[s] the reader with a sense of happy confusion and a deep need to puzzle out what happened. Michal Ajvaz has created a complex and rewarding book . . .

Complete Review
The Golden Age presents these concepts and notions surprisingly effectively; at heart a philosophical-aesthetic treatise, it nevertheless works as fiction, too -- not quite your everyday novel, but offering most of its satisfactions (including plot-wise, even if doesn't have a traditional story-arc). A lovely catalog of -- and meditation on -- other-worldly ideas and notions as well as a multi-layered work of fiction(s), The Golden Age is a wonderfully entertaining novel, with the sparkle of its bits coalescing surprisingly into an intriguing conceptual work.

Omnivoracious
The result is a text of stories within stories and a destabilization of narrative that's as playful as it is fascinating.

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