Dioramas A novel

Blair Austin

Book - 2023

"In a city far in the future, retired lecturer Wiggins moves from window to window in a museum, intricately describing each scene. Whales gliding above a shipwreck and a lost cup and saucer. An animatronic forest twenty stories tall. A line of mosquitos in uniforms and regalia, honored as heroes of the last great war. Bit by bit, Wiggins unspools the secrets of his world - the conflict that brought it to the brink, and the great thinker, Michaux, who led the diorama revolution, himself now preserved under glass. After a phone call in the middle of the night, Wiggins sets out to visit the Diorama of the Town: an entire, dioramic world, hundreds of miles across, where people are objects of curiosity, taxidermied and posed. In this hybrid... novel - part essay, part prose poem, part travel narrative - Blair Austin brings us nose to the glass with our own vanishing world, what we preserve and at what cost." --

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Subjects
Genres
Experimental fiction
Fiction
Published
Ann Arbor, MI : Dzanc Books 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Blair Austin (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
310 pages ; 22 cm
Awards
Dzanc Prize for Fiction, [2023]
ISBN
9781950539758
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Austin's debut novel follows an aging academic through a surreal future. To read this novel is to be immersed in both its retro-futuristic setting and the obsessions of its haunted protagonist. Narrator Wiggins has retired from his job at a museum, and he spends his time musing on the way the world in which he lives--characterized by an abundance of dioramas large and small--came about. This is not a novel that abounds in exposition; it's not until a third of the way through that we get a sense of when in the future we might be. Specifically, it's at least 300 years after an apocalyptic event; since then, efforts have been underway to restore the world. But there's an underlying sadness to Wiggins' musings, which abound with comments like, "Curation too is an act of despair." And the inner workings of the society in which Wiggins lives include some queasy details: mosquitoes used in surgery, tumors produced to use in dioramas, and a disquieting line about "the birds made up of other birds" among them. Wiggins contrasts two historical (for him) figures: Michaux, "the great dioramist," whom he admires and who was once more widely known and who can now be found "appearing by consent in a diorama"; and the unsettling Minister Goll, who had a penchant for dioramas and murder--and cannibalism. The end result is visceral and heady: a book that finds the overlap of Mervyn Peake's Gormenghast, Lidia Yuknavitch's The Book of Joan, and the writings of Steven Millhauser. It's a haunting piece of speculative fiction, a dystopian society mapped from within. The nightmarish aspects of this novel's setting sneak up on you and linger. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.