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Arqtiq: A Study of the Marvels at the North Pole

Gelesen von Chuck Williamson

(3,5 Sterne; 4 Bewertungen)

Described by author Liza Daly as a "strange masterpiece of outsider art," Arqtiq is a bizarre, borderline hallucinatory work of feminist utopian fiction. Equal parts sci-fi adventure, philosophical tract, and pro-Symmesian pamphlet, Anna Adolph’s strange, self-published novella centers its narrative around an aviator (also named Anna) who, along with a ragtag group of family and friends, charts an expedition to the North Pole in a retro-futuristic airship of her own invention. There, Anna and her crew travel into the hollow earth, encounter a race of telepathic giants, and uncover secrets about God and the universe.

Written in a style that teeters somewhere between modernist abstraction and amateurish enthusiasm, Arqtiq almost defies comprehension. It is a maddening and oftentimes incoherent tale that nonetheless fascinates with its unhinged imagination. It is perhaps one of the most exuberantly surreal and dreamlike works of utopian fiction from this era. - Summary by ChuckW (4 hr 2 min)

Chapters

Chapter 1

16:59

Read by Chuck Williamson

Chapter 2

11:28

Read by Chuck Williamson

Chapter 3

18:04

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Chapter 4

32:55

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Chapter 5

9:29

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Chapter 6

15:17

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Chapter 7

6:01

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Chapter 8

47:56

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Chapter 9, Part 1

39:34

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Chapter 9, Part 2

44:20

Read by Chuck Williamson