Claude Simon, Conducting Bodies (Grove, 1971)
Have you ever read a 191-page paragraph?
Okay, if that doesn't put you off, how about a 191-page paragraph that switches back and forth from scene to scene with no warning? Okay, with a little warning.
Claude Simon's Conducting Bodies is an experiment in memory, I think. Simon uses a number of catchphrases (the "conducting bodies" of the title) to alert the reader to upcoming scene changes. Often, a scene changes in the middle of the action and will be picked up again later; sometimes a hundred pages or so later. There are no divisions of any sort; no chapters, no paragraphs, no nothing. If there weren't sentence breaks I'd have had to try and read the whole thing at one sitting.
It's possible that this is actually a work of genius. After all, Simon did win the Nobel Prize for literature in 1985, and I assume the committee had a reason for giving it to him. And maybe I just wasn't paying close enough attention. And, to be fair, as things weaved in and out, I found I was able to keep track of the threads without actually expending time on doing do; Simon would pick up a thread again he'd left off ten or fifteen pages before and I had no problem remembering what had been going on at the time. But this is a very tiring book, not only because of the attention it commands but also because of the simple visual conceit of having no breaks anywhere on the page, line after line after full line of unbroken text. And it's headache-inducing after a while. I kept going to see if anything would tie all these different threads in in the end, and I guess that's something, too. But without anything to seize upon, the ever-falling rain of images gets to be too much. Things CAN be too sweet. *