Dæmonomania

Dæmonomania

Cover of the First Edition of Dæmonomania by Bantam Books featuring Frans Floris' Fall of the Rebel Angels
Author John Crowley
Cover artist Laurie Jewell
Country United States of America
Language English
Series Ægypt Tetralogy
Genre Modern Fantasy
Publisher Bantam Books
Publication date
August 2000
Media type Print (1st edition)
Pages 451
ISBN 978-1590200445
Preceded by Love & Sleep
Followed by Endless Things

Daemonomania is a 2000 Modern Fantasy novel by John Crowley. It is Crowley's seventh novel, and as the third novel in Crowley's Ægypt Sequence, a sequel to Crowley's 1994 novel Love & Sleep. The novel follows protagonist Pierce Moffett as he continues his book project begun in The Solitudes about the Renaissance and Hermeticism, while dealing with a stormy relationship with his girlfriend Rosie Ryder.

Like the previous novels, the novel has four main narrative strands, one occurring in the present day generally following Pierce or Rosie Mucho in their artistic works, and two occurring in the Renaissance following the historical fictional activities of John Dee, Edward Kelley and Giordano Bruno as written by fictional novelist Fellowes Kraft. The difference is marked stylistically by dashes indicating dialogue for events that happened in the Renaissance and events in the twentieth century marked by dialogue in ordinary English quotation marks.

Background

The novel's title derives from De la Démonomanie des Sorciers a book purporting to be about demonology intended for would-be Exorcists written by sixteenth-century French Jurist and politician Jean Bodin. Pierce and Rosie encounter the book in Part I Chapter 13 among Fellowes Kraft's collection of rare books collected from his travels in Europe.

Thematically, the novel deals with the high numbers of demonic possessions and encounters with sorcery reported in the seventeenth century, precipitating a rise in dogmaticism among both Christians, Muslims and Scientific Thinkers at the time. In the Author's Note, Crowley cites the research of Nuccio Ordine, Angelo Maria Ripellino, Brian P. Levnack, Carlo Ginzburg, Ioan P. Culianu, and Deborah Vansau Mccauley.[1] The novel was Crowley's first work with editor Ron Drummond.

This novel of the sequence is sectioned based on the second three of the Astrological Houses. Uxor, signifying spouses or partnership; and Mors, signifying death or reincarnation; and Pietas, signifying journeys or philosophy.

Plot

In an Introductory chapter (chronologically taking place mid-way through the novel's plot), Pierce Moffett takes a bus ride from the Blackberry Jambs to New York City, reflecting on his relationship with Rose Ryder. While Pierce left his Catholic faith in adolescence, Rose is ardently pursuing her faith in the Powerhouse Christian sect.

In the Renaissance, John Dee and Edward Kelley again contact the angel, Madimi, who in previous volumes, first commanded their wandering. The treatments he prepared to grant the Emperor fertility have also failed, and the court grown paranoid, hiring spies who may be watching Dee. Dee arranges for the man accused of being a werewolf, Jan, to seek passage to the New World with Dee as he leaves Prague. He leaves Kelley behind, who on telling the Emperor of his supposed Irish nobility, is Knighted. Dee is further shocked when Kelley tells him and the court that all their alchemical practices were all derived from Kelley's own intuition, and not occult means. In an effort to lighten the load of their ship off the Continent, Dee spills the gold on the ground, much of which has somehow decayed and stinks. He finally returns to England (narrowly missing the premiere of Marlowe's Faustus), and remains destitute for some time, until finally finding a wardenship at Manchester College. In the face of growing persecution, he refuses to harm Catholics, and treats those accused of demonic possession with caution, but kindness. He eventually hears word that Kelley has died, and in fear at his own growing reputation as a wizard, retires from public life, gaining money only by selling his books.

On a visit to New York, Beau Brachman is given a tract from a quasi-Gnostic sect, advocating the worship of the exiled "Sophia" as primordial to all religious practice, and the only escape from mankind's "imprisonment." He takes the tract, remembering another copy early in his life, reflecting on how he has followed the broad demands of Ancient Gnosticism to seek spiritual pleasure, but not to procreate. Beau makes contact with a gnostic-like cult in the wilderness beyond the Blackberry Jambs led by an aging patriarch, Plato Goodenough.

In the confusion of the crowd, an Ass tied near the area escapes, and wanders out of the city. The chest Mary Philomel unlocked in the previous volume is revealed to not have opened, but responded with sounds resembling internal clockwork continuing for several years and coming to a stop at the novel's end.

Characters

As earlier stated, the novel follows both characters in the present, as well as those in the Historical novels written by unseen character Fellowes Kraft.

Characters in The Present

Characters of the Renaissance

Reception

Critic Harold Bloom praised the novel, calling it "A Masterpiece of spiritual insight and of superb style and characterization.[3]

Publishers Weekly positively reviewed the book, focusing on its ability to include philosophical and historical material into a novel still within the fantasy genre.[4] The novel was briefly and negatively reviewed in the New York Times, the reviewer uncertain of any connection at all between the two storylines.[5] In The Village Voice, Elizabeth hand published an overview of the entire series, praising Daemonomania for its engagement of the darker aspects of the Renaissance, American spirituality, and Pierce's sexual drives.[6]

James Hynes wrote a long article advocating Crowley's be considered "a serious literary reputation" on the release of Daemonomania, calling the three books already released of the series "already, unfinished–an astonishing accomplishment".[7] Hynes pointed out that many other reviewers, particularly Jeff Waggoner, reviewed the novel improperly, having missed the connection between the previous volumes as comprising a series.[7]

Further reading

  • Crowley, John (2000). Daemonomania. New York: Bantam Books. ISBN 0553100041. 
  • Snake's-hands : The Fiction of John Crowley. Canton, OH: Cosmos Books. 2003. ISBN 978-1587155093.  |first1= missing |last1= in Authors list (help)
  • Dirda, Michael (Winter 2008). "Souls Hungering After Meaning". The American Scholar. Retrieved 10 April 2012. 

References

  1. Crowley, John (2000). "Author's Note". Daemonomania. New York: Bantam Books. p. 452. ISBN 0553100041.
  2. Crowley, John (1994). Love & sleep. New York: Bantam Books. p. 419. ISBN 0553096427.
  3. Crowley, John; Harold Bloom (2000). Daemonomania. New York: Bantam Books. p. Cover. ISBN 0553100041.
  4. "Fiction Review: Daemonomania". Publishers Weekly. July 31, 2000. Retrieved 30 March 2013.
  5. Waggoner, Jeff (September 17, 2000). "Daemonomania". New York Times. Retrieved 30 March 2013.
  6. Hand, Elizabeth (August 15, 2000). "Occult Classic". The Village Voice. Retrieved 25 May 2013.
  7. 1 2 Hynes, James (December 2000). "Genre Trouble". Boston Review. Retrieved 24 March 2012.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, April 16, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.