Roberto Bolano's "The Savage Detectives" discussion

This topic is about
The Savage Detectives
the cabbage detectives
>
Comments on the Interviews
We're up to just under 15,000 words. How easy was that?
There are many members who I know would be fantastic interviewees, but who haven't written anything yet.
Assuming nothing untoward happens to the Visceral Realists en route to the Big Easy (e.g., train crashes into a pineapple plantation), two things could happen.
One, we could build to a denouement and finish it.
Two, we could keep it open-ended and let anybody add to it from time to time.
Three, hey, we could start another chapter!
What do you all think?
Who is lurking on the sidelines and just needs some time to contribute?
Now is the time to assert your character's right to participate, so that we all know they're part of the story.
There are many members who I know would be fantastic interviewees, but who haven't written anything yet.
Assuming nothing untoward happens to the Visceral Realists en route to the Big Easy (e.g., train crashes into a pineapple plantation), two things could happen.
One, we could build to a denouement and finish it.
Two, we could keep it open-ended and let anybody add to it from time to time.
Three, hey, we could start another chapter!
What do you all think?
Who is lurking on the sidelines and just needs some time to contribute?
Now is the time to assert your character's right to participate, so that we all know they're part of the story.

Interestingly folks, he says that the tomato is also known as the love apple(freud would be so pleased) : originally from Peru and related to the potato (both of the deadly nightshade family) a red or yellow fruit.
The man seems to be bold and knowledgable, but too bold and not knowledgable at all about crucial aspects of food combination.He will try anything it seems and some of his combinations gmde me queasy.As a practitioner of macrobiotics,when I was studying at the East-West Foundation in Boston,we experimented with food combining along the yin/yang continuum and I am convinced of the importance of this for good digestion. As bad digestion detracts from creative endeavour as well as being damned unpleasant,I think we need to pay more attention to our digestion.
Of corse I am biased but even western medicine,so focused on suppression of symptoms and cure,is waking up to this and beginning explore diet as a means of prevention.
It is known fact that different foods require different enzymes to aid in their digestion.In the 60's with the back to the land movent we all had food combining charts on our kitchen walls.I often referred to this book(earlier edition)
Food Combining Made Easy
This has been a rather sober 2 cents worthh which I somehow felt necessary to add to sort of grounding the gutwrenchingly underhandedly funny quite destabilizing
It amazes me that ancient people knew so much about food, and most of us just ignore it. Of course, I'm the kind of person who admires the first person ever to eat an oyster, but I assume that they had seen a bird eat one and must have known it was safe, if not aesthetically appealing.

I'm not going to comment on the posts separately at this stage, because i got a bit behind and they are all good and made me laugh a lot.

Two, we could keep it open-ended and let anybody add to it from time to time.
Three, hey, we could start another chapter!
..."
Maybe let it run on a bit more and then wrap it up when it seems to obviously have come to it's end; or simply leave it open.
In any case, i do feel we should and perhaps start a new folder (eventually) where we move off of fruit and veggies?
This group seems to have such creative talent, i'd love to see what more they can up with. Just a suggestion.
That's fine by me. But in the meantime, the world needs to see your poem in the Anthology folder.

I guess to make it really true to the book, you'd have to insert some dope here and there as well.

I hope to get back to group activities here very soon. In the meantime, please proceed, and have fun with it! -Jim


Funny, I dont remember any sex in the savage detectives. I am not actually rereading, just poking around, looking at some notes I made at the time.
I would be thrilled if any of youse wanted to carry on with my story, second installment just posted. I wish I didnt have to go off to work,,,yesterday very late.

Magdelanye wrote: Funny, I dont remember any sex in the savage detectives. I am not actually rereading, just poking around, looking at some notes I made at the time..."
I could quote some of it if you like?

"La Vucciria" by Renato Guttuso
Renato was a painter who illustrated Elizabeth David's "Italian Food":
http://www.all-art.org/art_20th_centu...

but when I click on the links, it just redirects me to the top of the page?
Magdelanye wrote: "love this amazing painting.
but when I click on the links, it just redirects me to the top of the page?"
I think it's fixed, M.
but when I click on the links, it just redirects me to the top of the page?"
I think it's fixed, M.



Hoping all turns out well, Jim. Take care.

"La Vucciria" by Renato Guttuso
Renato was a painter who illustrated Elizabeth David's "Italian Food":
http://www.all-art.org/art_20th_centu..."
Great painting and web site - thanks, Ian.

When I noted the lack of cabbages in the image/painting that you posted, I realized, of course! it is not that the detectives are cabbages, but that they are looking for cabbages.......I finally got it in a way I did not when hit over the head with a giant one, altho I admit I found that development,the stolen giant cabbage,strangely satisfying.
He is a visceral realist for sure!
oh Ian who taught me how to bold... thank you for this and all the savage fun of this site and this new group of delightful people.
Now where are Bird Brian,Paul B, Praj, Bennet and Shovelmonkey? Kinkajou and HRO and Ellie and Ice Bear!! These folks are all in my story, I want their POV and delight

It's OK Jim, your character is still kind of insane for some reason...but I think we finally wheened you off the pineapple
Magdelanye, no pressure, but I'm waiting for some more interviews from you, so we can work GOOSE and the waiting stones into the resolution of the plot. I was hoping that we could shape the ending this weekend, so that the cabbage is found by Wednesday, when it can be triumphantly eaten by the Cabbage Detectives. What happens after then is up for grabs.
Needless to say, Don Juan is particularly concerned that we finish the first part of the story before we're all distracted by The Master and Margarita.



Ewwewww

Good heavens, the mind boggles as to what that would taste like... D: yetcchh!
EDIT: Kris is in before me- what Kris said: Ewwwewww ...not to mention that it might stay with you all the way down your digestive system... ok, i've been drinking those naughty choccies again, so it's all downhill from heere....




you will need a really good marketing ploy.
how about margarita flavored cabbage?
think sauerkraut with a kick.

Neither did I."
The Big Cabbage is in extreme danger. :(

think sauerkraut with a kick."
Haha much better!


I was thinking you were in NOLA and was tempted to send you the name of one of my favorite restaurants..."
Oh, I wish I were there, Mike - the restaurant sounds great! I was only in New Orleans once, in the mid-1980s. I need to get back there again. This gives me more incentive for a visit.

We’re all here, we’re waiting” I told Kris. On the table with me sat Jay Rubin and Eiji the cat who were both enthralled with “The Wind-Up Bird Chronicles”, Jenn frantically turning the pages of “The Savage Detectives”, Viajero Haldez using her knife to turn the pages of “Chronicle of a Death Foretold”, Esteban with his face buried inside “Infinite Jest” and Magdelanye sighing into the pages of Pynchon’s “V.”
Homework well done, Mary!

That sounds wonderful - and it's easier for me to travel at that time of year than it used to be, so attending the festival could be in my future. Great variety of artists performing, too. This looks much more my speed than Mardi Gras. Thanks for the inspiration, Mike!

We had shared something really special once, and I had to admit that he still looked a little like a darker Brad Pitt if the lighting was right and I squinted a bit. I drove a bit faster, spurred on by the urgency of our quest, as well as by my impatience to see our comrades. I also knew that we would have another obstacle to discuss when we reunited - how to deal with what had befallen Jim. I couldn't imagine our succeeding without him, but reuniting with him would be its own challenge.
Perhaps the cabbage detectives are in such a hurry that their compatriots cannot catch up with them? You know, with them sometimes having things to do besides revolutionary activities and looking for giant cabbages?
...but i had to laugh at: he still looked a little like a darker Brad Pitt if the lighting was right and I squinted a bit. Tee-hee!

...but i had to laugh at: he still looked a little like a darker Brad Pitt if the lighting was right and I squinted a bit. Tee-hee! "
Ah yes, RL interfering yet again! And yes, I figured it was time to pick up on those Brad Pitt references that DJ keeps making. :)
Post 49 - Very nice set-up, Don Juan! I shall watch for developments and try to remember my story on the morrow. Hopefully I can borrow.