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Jerusalem
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Jerusalem - Prelude
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Dianne
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Jul 03, 2017 04:45AM

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We are going to start things slowly with the holiday celebrations, but hopefully our members from other parts of the globe will join the discussion and the holidays will not halt the reading speed.
In the vein of our tradition, we usually start slowly, but I will try to open threads ahead for those who are already ahead of the reading schedule.
The Prelude - Work in Progress.
One word that I can use to describe it is PACKED - packed with descriptions, packed with words, packed with ideas, and packed with the feeling of space.
1. Did you find the language and the choice of words challenging, exciting, adequate for the introduction?
2. Time Hop is the device to move the story forward. Did the story sound coherent to you because of the multiple forward time hops?
3. We are told that the minutial and detailed description is a dream only 10-15 pages after. Did you feel that this statement about the dream justified? Did it explain the questions we had (most definitely I had some) about the loosely-joined parts of the narrative?
4. Was there too much of the description in the Prelude?
Personally, I was overwhelmed with all the minutia and the nuances in the Prelude, but, on the other hand, dreams often had that surreal heightened feeling and the loosely related events, but I still think for the opening part of the book, it was somewhat flat and unappealing.
As usual , in our group, you do not have to answer the questions that are listed in the opening post; they are mostly discussion teasers, something that gets the ball rolling.
As I have already mentioned, I was overwhelmed by the amount of the detail that was provided in the prelude. Yes, it did convey the heightened sensation of the dream, but somehow it left me unsatisfied. I labored through these pages. It is not an exciting part so far, and the characters are dull and boring. One can call Alma decadent or rebellious and inordinary, but somehow she was ordinarily inordinary.
There was some spiciness in the family history that hopefully will be explored in other chapters, but the prelude left me wanting more and in a state of dissatisfaction, but one does not judge the book by its cover nor by its first pages.

I'm now into Book Three and am already dreading the moment when it ends.
By the by, and if you haven't already guessed, Alma is a thinly veiled self portrait of Alan Moore. Indeed look on the inside back cover of the hardback edition and there's a photo of Alan and his brother captioned 'Alma and Mick Warren'.

Not sure about the dialogue being written in dialect. I have given up on books before because of the impenetrable way in which dialogue was written (I am looking at you Paul Kingsnorth) but I am sure that I will get used to it if the rest of the writing is as high quality as the prelude. "
I am listening to the book, which is stunningly narrated by Simon Vance, whilst also regular referring to the hardback edition, and the accents and dialect really add to the audio experience.
On one level 'Jerusalem' is a love letter to Northampton and so the accents also really add to the sense of place, and reinforce the local identity.
I hope you get used to the dialect soon Karen - I think it really adds something, just as Irvine Welsh's work just wouldn't work in the same way without the vernacular to bring it to life.
I highly recommend the audiobook.

I might also look online for some examples of the Northampton accent so that I can 'hear' it more easily. At the moment it sounds Cornish when I read it!
I love Moore's descriptions already. I had no idea that walking along a deserted, wet city street could be evoked so clearly and with such beauty. Gorgeous.

It's not at all Cornish Karen, much more of a Midlands accent if that means anything. I don't know if you're from the UK, or familiar with the accents of the UK. It's similar to Birmingham or Coventry. Well, more Coventry, Leicester etc. Northampton is close to those places so no surprise really.
The best way to sample it is to listen to Alan Moore in conversation. For example....
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RpajF...


I'm now on page 827 of 'Jerusalem", and have just finished 'A Cold and Frosty Morning' which is really a day in the life of Alma Warren (the thinly veiled self portrait of Alan Moore). Absolutely blimmin marvellous it is too. I really want that to be a pretty typical day in Alan's life.
NOT TO SELF: Checkout the Herbie cartoons by Ogden Whitney (in Forbidden Worlds and his own publication).
I love this book - and can't wait to see what other Chunksters make of it
Karen wrote: "I was born and live in Coventry"
Wow, you're only 30 miles away - you can easily go and visit some of the sites in the book, you lucky thing

I love the language and the imagery although at times it was overwhelming and I have had to reread parts - which is a pleasure not a chore really. What struck me was how even the most insignificant element of a scene is described. I'm thinking of the description of the ashtray in the pub and of Alma's hair trailing across the table. Moore's powers of description and use of imagery are stunning.
I have also found that the best way for me to read the writing so far is to give myself up to it; allow myself to drift with the currents and not to think too much in terms of plot.
I haven't found it 'flat' or 'unappealing' quite the contrary. Although if the rest of the book is as packed with imagery and description I might struggle as it can be tiring.
I like the dreamy quality of the prelude and the time hops are just part of the incoherence of dreams. I have vivid dreams myself and like thinking about them and how they relate to waking life so I can enjoy this section without too much difficulty.
Alma and Michael are both people that I want to get know better and I think about them when not reading even though I have only read the prelude!

Rest assured the style (and most especially the content) is really varied. The writing style however is uniformly wonderful.


I love the section in the dream sequence where Alma's sketchy comprehension of the overheard snatches of conversation provides "a coat-rack of precarious hooks from which she could drape tentative connecting threads of conjecture and wild guesswork linking up one notion with another."
There's another great extended metaphor comparing navigating the street to riding the rapids. (One downside of Kindle is no page numbers).
Mick's dream/vision about being in the ceiling with fairies, and the crazed young man's insistence of being "up in the roof of the pub" make me wonder if there will be supernatural doings in the story. We shall see!

As Alma and Mick walk around the neighbourhood, and think about what is there and what was there and what may be there in the future, I am starting to get a mental picture of the area. It feels very much like T.S. Eliot's "The Waste Land" as it moves back and forward in time, describing an environment just as desolate as Eliots.

lots of similes from Art.

lots o..."
Of course he is an artist. Most of his work is graphic art.

That said, he painted the picture on the cover of 'Jerusalem' so he clearly does some painting.

It is very allusive in tone at least. I also experienced literary "déjà vu" when I read the next two chapters, The first books that came to my mind were The Spire and Hawksmoor.


You know, when I first started reading, I was almost immediately turned off by little Alma with the thoughts, vocabulary, and analytical reasoning of a full adult (of course, this all went away when all was revealed later in the Prelude). My hackles started rising, but then, the waves of sensory impressions kind of swept me away. I love how we experience the Emporium Arcade; not by what is actually there, right then, at that moment. No, rather, we are given vivid word paintings of what "should" be there, but is not. It's a nice little twist, experiencing and learning about something by its absence, rather than its presence.

I loved this, truly loved it. I'm hoping it is a theme, or a foundation of this work.
Reading Moore, I'm reminded of Dickens. I suppose it makes sense. Moore is a graphic artist (of course, he doesn't actually do the drawings, but he definitely thinks in pictures); Dickens felt a deep connection to the theater. Both are highly visual arts. There is a kinship there. At least to me.

I felt that the "Prelude" was an introduction to prepare us for what we were "reading" our way into.

I haven't read any Moore, but his description of Michael walking through the Burroughs on his way to Alma's showing, and the intense feelings of malaise and depression he experiences...it reminded me a bit of Stephen King, who specializes in creating and evoking "bad places".
And speaking of the Showing, was anyone else intrigued by Alma calling her painting depicting her dream "A Work in Progress"?

I went to the Foundlings Museum in London today and there were resonances for me in some fo the stories and details of the Foundlings. The geography of Bloomsbury also has a resonance for me with this book. A similar layered feel, a depth of history and culture and diversity.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Spire (other topics)Hawksmoor (other topics)