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list price: $18.00
edition:Paperback
also available: eBook
category: Fiction
published: Jun 2015
ISBN:9781771661072
publisher: Book*hug Press

The Thought House of Philippa

by Suzanne Leblanc, translated by Oana Avasilichioaei & Ingrid Pam Dick

tagged: contemporary women, literary, psychological
Description

Suzanne Leblanc's The Thought House of Philippa transposes a theory of individuality into a stunningly reflective, sensuous and frank philosophical novel. Setting the chapters in the various rooms of the house Ludwig Wittgenstein designed for his sister in Vienna, Leblanc's novel lays out P.'s intensely emotional and intellectually acute way of seeing the world and her place in it. Prompted by early isolation, P. moves towards the Great World of others and Nature, alienated from the everyday, yet devoted to a deeper connection, in an exploration that is profound and moving. Ideas crucial to Wittgenstein's work—limit, freedom, interior and exterior, self and world—echo and shift in Leblanc's precise, incantatory prose, propelled through the architecture. The distinct voices of the novel's four sections act as musical movements, constructed from repetition, variation and development of language, in alternating keys of austerity and splendour. The effect—a pure expression of the passion of clear thought, the adventure of solitude, and the beauty of uncompromising encounter—is utterly riveting. A sui generis experimental novel not to be missed.

About the Authors

Suzanne Leblanc

SUZANNE LEBLANC has a PhD in philosophy (1983) and in visual arts (2004) and has been teaching since 2003 at the School of Visual Arts at the University of Laval (Quebec). She has exhibited multi-media installations in Quebec and has published theoretical works in Germany, France, Switzerland, and Canada. Her research and creative work deal with philosophical forms inherent in artistic disciplines.


Oana Avasilichioaei

OANA AVASILICHIOAEI is a Montreal-based poet, translator, and artist. She is the author of many books, including Expeditions of a Chimaera (with Erín Moure; 2009), We, Beasts (2012; winner of the A.M. Klein Prize for Poetry) and Limbinal (2015). Previous translations include Catherine Lalonde’s The Faerie Devouring (winner of the 2018 Cole Foundation Prize for Translation), three books by Bertrand Laverdure, including Universal Bureau of Copyrights (finalist for the 2015 ReLit Award, Readopolis (winner of the 2017 Governor General’s Literary Award for Translation), and The Neptune Room (finalist for the 2020 Governor General's Literary Award for Translation).


Ingrid Pam Dick

INGRID PAM DICK (a.k.a. Gregoire Pam Dick, Mina Pam Dick, Jake Pam Dick et al.) is the author of Metaphysical Licks (BookThug 2014) and Delinquent (2009). Her writing has appeared in BOMB, frieze, The Brooklyn Rail, Aufgabe, EOAGH, Fence, Matrix, Open Letter, Poetry Is Dead, and elsewhere. Her philosophical work has appeared in a collection published by the International Wittgenstein Symposium. Also an artist and translator, Dick lives in New York City, where she is currently doing work that makes out and off with Büchner, Wedekind, Walser, and Michaux.

Editorial Reviews

“Philippa is enigmatic, relevant, honest, and intuitive. Read her story.”—Nomadic Press


“Leblanc demands deep engagement but rewards in pure, surprisingly sensual, thought. A dense novel that challenges notions of what a novel can be.”—The Globe and Mail


“The lucid translation by poets Oana Avasilichioae & Ingrid Pam Dick clearly honors and brings out the musicality and thought-space of Leblanc’s challenging, austere prose.”—Drunken Boat


"The best Quebecois novel I read this year... The book's beauty rests in offering a series of reflections built on philosophical concepts, which, as the narrative progresses, take an aesthetic form that is both sculpted and boundless"—Goodreads


“A novel of many ideas, Avasilichioaei and Dick’s translation keeps up with Leblanc’s ambitious emotional and didactic flourishes, while discovering in the abstraction of ‘discourse’ the most lovely music, making The Thought House of Philippa a singular, immersive, self-meditative experience."—All Lit Up


“Like much of Wittgenstein’s own writing, The Thought House of Philippa is spare and, in many ways, open-ended, suggestive rather than absolute…It is an interesting work of fiction, the language and presentation seductive in the way Wittgenstein’s own work can be.”—The Complete Review

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