What the WTF is this batty and brilliant book “about,” I hear you crying in the valleys of Aberystwyth. Far it be from me to attempt to untangle this knotty prism of brilliance, so here is our friend Susan Birch from Christine Brooke-Rose and Contemporary Fiction:
“Such begins with a voice in the first-person describing the process of climbing out of his coffin into an unknown world of orbits and ellipses. He meets a character who describes herself as a ‘girl-spy.’ When he insists that they must have names, she agrees to call him ‘Someone’ and allows him to call her ‘Something.’ Something carries on her arm five offspring, variously described as planets, moons and cylinders. Someone adopts two of these creatures and urges that they too be named. Accordingly, the five bodies are baptized with the names of famous Blues songs: ‘Dippermouth,’ ‘Gut Bucket,’ ‘Potato Head,’ ‘ Tin Roof,’ and ‘Really.’ Upon receiving names they fly off into orbit, and return one by one during the course of the first part of the novel to be given ‘rebirth’ by Someone.” (p63)
“In Such the discourse of astrophysics is used to subvert that of classical psychoanalysis. Astrophysics is concerned with bodies of cosmic proportions, but it is also involved with the smallest of particles, those postulated by quantum mechanics. Specifically, astrophysics studies the origin of the universe through analysis of the characteristics of subatomic particles of light, matter, and energy. Thus, while Out dramatizes the consequences of the principle of relativity for the observation of effects, Such turns instead to the exploration of the origins of identity in terms of contemporary theories of cosmic birth. The concepts of astrophysics are mapped onto the human psyche in such a way as to contest the assumptions which depth psychology has popularized.” (p63)
That really is enough. If that doesn’t convince you this book is battily brilliant, you are an ape-like creature with only one eye. Freak!