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The Dodecahedron by Paul Glennon  

The Dodecahedron, or A Frame for Frames is a kaleidoscopic puzzle-novel ... of sorts. Twelve stories of seemingly different genres cohere into a book of astonishing literary dimension. Stewart Cole of the Quill & Quire wrote that ‘The Dodecahedron never ceases to be about people: how despite the diversity of our obsessions, convergences prevail among us. One rarely sees a book of such scope and ambition succeed so thrillingly.’

Twelve narratives, twelve narrators, twelve genres and twelve fictional worlds collide to spectacular effect in Paul Glennon’s The Dodecahedron, or a Frame for Frames. The second book from the author of How Did You Sleep? takes his adventures in short fiction to strange new regions, where professional polygamists, heretical alcoholics and hallucinating arctic explorers find themselves sharing plot points, character traits and dialogue.

At turns philosophical and farcical, The Dodecahedron makes for intriguing, compelling reading. Each of the book’s twelve chapters has its own style and apparent fictional autonomy, but every narrative finds itself corroborated or undermined by the next. Messages found in bottles, computer-generated dialogues and the lamentations of the world’s last genie shouldn’t have much in common, but their paths constantly intersect in The Dodecahedron, creating networks of allusions and contradictions. The Dodecahedron revels in the art of story making and proves once and for all that the geometry of the dodecahedron is a rich source of comic fiction.

prize

2005—ForeWord Magazine, Book of the Year (Short Stories),
Shortlisted

prize

2006—City of Ottawa Book Award,
Shortlisted

prize

2006—Governor General's Literary Awards,
Shortlisted

prize

2006—Globe Top 100,
Commended

Table of contents

In My Father’s Library

The Plot to Hide America

The American Shahrazad

Tenebrian Chronicles

The Collector

Why Are There No Penguins?

Kepler’s Orbit: Chapter 1

The Polygamist

The Parlour Game

Some Clippings for My Article

The Last Story

Plagiarism

Author’s Afterword

Review quote

‘Paul Glennon’s writing is ‘‘unlike just about everything else being published in Canada’’.’

—Nathan Whitlock, Danforth Review

Review quote

‘To call The Dodecahedron Paul Glennon’s second ‘‘collection’’ would be a little misleading. Images, phrases, characters, and scenarios recur so frequently over these twelve stories that spotting the skewed correspondences becomes a sort of hallucinatory game for the reader, making this wonderful book less a collection or novel of linked stories than a puzzle -- one whose solution remains delightfully out of grasp. ...

‘While it’s difficult not to detect the guiding hand of the author in such an overtly constructed project, Glennon’s presence remains unobtrusive. The characters’ voices guide the tenor of the prose, not vice-versa. So despite wearing its conceptual underpinnings on its sleeve, The Dodecahedron never ceases to be about people: how despite the diversity of our obsessions, convergences prevail among us. One rarely sees a book of such scope and ambition succeed so thrillingly.’

—Stewart Cole, Quill and Quire

Review quote

The Dodecahedron delivers the tension inspired by true magicians: the longing to understand the reality of an illusion along with the fervent desire to believe in magic.’

—Mary Jane Copps, Aloft

Review quote

‘There’s a lavish intelligence at work in Glennon’s book. He plays with the reader -- joining hands at times with her, at other times pushing her forcefully away -- but this is a fine model for reading: an experience that is once intellectual and visceral. A Frame for Frames is a worthwhile experiment. It makes something old new again.’

—Michael Redhill, Globe and Mail

Review quote

‘Readers interested in solving the puzzle are recommended to build a model. One assumes Glennon had one sitting on his desk so that he could keep it in front of him while he was putting the book together. You just can’t hold a structure like this together in your head. In other words, the concept is indisputably there, but also nowhere since it is invisible. The connections, recurrences, and relations are easy to spot, but not the shape of the whole. At this point one can be forgiven for thinking the whole thing is just a stunt, and too clever by half at that. Maybe it is. But it’s also one of the liveliest, smartest, most original books you’ll ever read.’

—Alex Good, goodreports.net

Review quote

The Dodecahedron is a book about stories and language. Specifically, it is about the freedom and fluidity of words before they are captured in writing. The interplay between stories allows this flow to exist on Glennon’s printed page. Because the details, the meaning and the accuracy of each piece of information is uncertain, the reader must keep speculating about the stories, allowing them to remain alive.’

—Kris Rothstein, matrix

Review quote

‘Two major characteristics of postmodernism-self-referentiality and physical texuality-make their way unabashedly into Paul Glennon’s The Dodecahedron. Subtitled A Frame for Frames, this ‘‘novel of sorts’’ consists of twelve interrelated sections that parade intratextuality over intertextuality (i.e., internal echoes within the novel are more prevalent than allusions to other texts) and weave a double helix at every turn.’

—Michael Greenstein, Books in Canada

Review quote

‘There is also a hint of Gnosticism in the book, as if part of Glennon is allied with the insane monks of Tenebria, desperate to escape this world of falsehood and waking dreams -- a world where even our senses betray us -- into an ideal world, a perfect realm, even if a realm of perfect nothingness.’

—Phil Marchand, Toronto Star

Author comments

When I began to write this book, I was thinking very much about the geometry of short story collections. Many modern short story collections have a larger structure that provides continuity and makes them read like novels. They are conceived as whole books and have a unity beyond a simple miscellany of tales. Characters or ideas progress through each subsequent story until the final story provides a resolution, or at very least a point of perspective from which to look back and re-evaluate the previous stories. Frequently these collections have a cyclical geometry, where ideas introduced in early stories are resolved or recast in the final story.

I wanted to produce something that shared many of these qualities. Each chapter was to be as self-contained and whole as any short story. Like a story cycle, each story would cast a new light on the ones that preceded it, and promote novel like unity of themes. What I did not want to write was a cyclical book, in which the final story is the final word, a story with more authority than all others, one that casts a sort of judgement on the rest. I was aiming for something more ambiguous than that. From the start, my intention was to write a book on the subject of perspective, a book in which any one of the stories could be taken as the starting point or the endpoint of the collection, in which each was capable of exerting that conclusive judgement usually the sole prerogative of the final chapter. I wrote a book based not on the geometry of the circle, but on the geometry of the dodecahedron. I’ll get back to that, but first a word from the French.

This book is constructed on mildly Oulipien principles, that is on the principles of the Ouvroir de la Littérature Potentielle (OuLiPo). OuLiPo is a group of mostly French authors who create literature based on highly arbitrary constraints of their own making. Amongst the most famous of these are Georges Perec’s La Disparition, a novel written entirely without the letter E and Raymond Queneau’s Exercises de Style in which the same object is described over and over in different rhetorical styles. The most obvious model for A Frame for Frames is another Oulipien text -- Italo Calvino’s Se Una Notte D’Inverno un Viaggiatore, a novel composed of a conspiracy frame story and ten first chapters of hypothetical books.

The arbitrary constraints I put on myself while writing A Frame for Frames emerge from the geometry of a dodecahedron. I envisioned a book in which each of the twelve chapters or stories represented a face of the dodecahedron. A dodecahedron’s faces are pentagonal, each a five sided polygon. In A Frame for Frames these sides represent a relationship to an adjacent story. This was the first constraint. Each story must refer to or be referred to by each of the five stories adjacent to it. These references to and from adjacent stories provide the shifting perspectives of this book. Any face of the dodecahedron may be taken as a starting point from which to evaluate the adjacent sides.

A dodecahedron has twenty vertices, points where three sides meet. In A Frame for Frames these vertices are represented by certain repetitions and recurrences in each of the three stories that meet in these points. If the elements that represent the vertices were extracted and placed in the order of their first appearance, they would form another text of sorts, which might provide another perspective for evaluating the whole.

The order in which the stories unfold is somewhat arbitrary. Any one could have been the first story, but once that choice was made their sequence was governed by a predetermined pattern. I considered only two patterns. The most obvious was the ‘orange peel’ sequence, using the pattern by which you can remove the peel of an orange in a single strip, by proceeding around it in a spiral. This would have produced a spiralling away from the themes and subjects of the first story to the point where the last story had no edges or vertices in common with it. Instead I went around two strips around the top and bottom hemispheres (or perhaps more properly hemihedrons), but left the top and bottom pentagons until the end. This saved one reference to or from each of the first five stories until the eleventh story, a goal which is supported by no other constraint than the author’s desire for another kind of unity.

—Paul Glennon

Discussion question for Reading Group Guide

1. The twelve narratives in The Dodecahedron have been said to be part of a ‘‘kaleidoscopic puzzle-novel’’, and Glennon says that ‘‘the order in which the stories unfold is somewhat arbitrary’’ -- if you were to rearrange the narratives into a new order, which would go first? How would this affect the way the narratives interact?

2. Much of The Dodecahedron deals with issues of false selves and untruths, often on the part of the narrator. Did you find particular narrators problematic or untrustworthy? How does this affect your understanding of that story, or of the book as a whole?

3. In what ways does The Dodecahedron play with and problematize perceptions of history and fiction? How does history intersect with fiction throughout the book?

4. Glennon uses a number of techniques to render some characters’ perspectives inaccessible to readers (for example, the one-sided conversations in ‘‘The Parlour Game’’) -- which of these ‘‘absent voices’’ are you most curious about, and why? What role does their voicelessness play in the narrative?

5. The book’s subtitle, A Frame for Frames, hints at how these sories are interconnected. Did one particular story jump out at you as a more obvious ‘‘frame’’ for the others to you? Or, more interestingly, did one seem somehow less connected to the whole when compared to the others? Think about the book as a whole through this less likely frame -- how does it change the way you think about it?

6. Motifs of consumption pervade the stories within The Dodecahedron, most obviously in ‘‘In My Father’s Library’’ -- which other figures act as ‘‘consumers’’ of others? Who, or what, is being consumed?

7. How are history and memory ‘‘rewritten’’ as The Dodecahedron progresses? How do you, as a reader, reconcile contrasting versions of the same narrative?


authorPic

Paul Glennon, born in England but resident in Ottawa since 1975, has been published in Descant, Matrix, Canadian Fiction Magazine, and the Blue Penny Quarterly. He has an MA from the University of Ottawa and currently works as a Human Factors specialist -- which means that he attempts to encourage software to work the way humans expect it to.

For more information please visit the Author’s website »

The Porcupine's Quill would like to acknowledge the support of the Ontario Arts Council and the Canada Council for the Arts for our publishing program. The financial support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund (CBF) is also gratefully acknowledged.

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FICTION / Short Stories

LITERARY COLLECTIONS / Canadian

ISBN-13: 9780889842755

Publication Date: 2005-09-30

Dimensions: 8.75 in x 5.56 in

Pages: 224

Price: $21.95