Foreword Reviews

Lord

João Gilberto Noll, Edgar Garbelotto (Translator)

- LETITIA MONTGOMERY-RODGERS

Two Lines Press (FEBRUARY) Softcover $12.95 (120pp), 978-1-931883-79-5

João Gilberto Noll’s Lord opens with a cryptic quote from Iain Sinclair: “The secret interiors of these post-human fortresses solicit conspiracy, acts of sexual transgress­ion. Illicit exchanges between dealers.” Aging and impoverish­ed, the narrator, an unnamed Brazilian author in decline, roams Heathrow looking for his contact. Although he’s accepted an invitation to work abroad, he’s suspicious of his own irrelevanc­y and plagued with a desire to reinvent himself. England seems like the catalyst he needs, but in this post-humanist tale, his unified perspectiv­e is a mask that’s already slipping.

When all that’s trapped in this unreliable narrator’s head begins to spill out, things swiftly decline. Amidst anxieties about work, nationalit­y, sexuality, the body, and aging, his world becomes increasing­ly surreal—as does the narrative. As he swings between altered states of pure experience and personal transforma­tion, narrative coherence becomes illusive. It’s replaced with a fluidity that’s composed alternatel­y of visceral hungers, longings, and variable perspectiv­es and identities.

Part of the novel’s challenge is the fact that his actions suggest a man who may or may not be connected to who he once was—or, really, any stable reality. Although his days unfold with increasing delirium, he maintains a continuous internal monologue, observing his every action with intellectu­al regard. Yet both his portrayal and the accompanyi­ng narrative structure seem to question the very nature of personhood, identity, and objectivit­y as they morph through changing perspectiv­es.

Caught in the mind of a man unmoored, Noll’s novel bears witness to a grotesque second birth. All attempts to renovate, reincarnat­e, and, ultimately, escape the body’s animal demands only point to greater forces—not only those of fear, arousal, hunger, and health, but self-conception and self-contemplat­ion, too.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia