House of leaves was a very interesting book. Form the content to the layout everything carried some sort of meaning and moved not only the story along but the reading. From the very first page I was sucked into Truant’s struggle with the ominous book that he had stumbled across. I was curious to find out what it the book Zampano had written but I was also very cautious and a little frightened by Johnny’s tail of getting lost in the book.
The layout of the pages was very interesting to me. On page 425 the writing on the page begins to take on the form of the endless hallways of Navidon’s house. The boxes of text get smaller and smaller mirroring Navidon’s journey through a tight passage. When he reaches a large room Danielewski uses just one word on a page to illustrate Navidon’s smallness in the immense maze that he is caught up in. this use of text as illustration appeals to me because I see thing in a more visual way.
Similarly on pages 468-483 small bursts of text appear almost randomly on the page. This shows Navidon’s aloneness as well as the darkness that he has encountered.
The illustration, broken text, footnotes, and the scattered appendices are all-similar to styles used in hypertexts on story space and others. This added reading to the normal book all goes to make a more emissive experience when reading. I also found myself looking things up online. Mostly the references to see if some were real. And to try and make some sense out of why they were used. Most of them weren’t real. Although in some books this would create something unreal but the way that Danielewski used them constantly referencing back and in between made up author created a reality all its own.
Truant’s story followed Navidon’s very well and although he was in the real world he was just as lost and obsessed as Navision in his search for answers revolving around Zampano’s book. Both of these main characters were haunted by their obsession with the house/text. And in the end they could not escape from their obsession.
Sunday, March 28, 2010
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The idea of obsession is an interesting one. All the characters seen to be defined by it at one point or another. For some, like Navidson and Truant, and probably Zampano as well, it is their primary characteristic. Navidson even seems to already be obsessed before anything strange starts to happen. I'm mean putting up camera's everywhere, to what, record your move? Seems over the top. It's as if he's inviting the evil somehow. Like the constant scrutiny made the house "go bad." Then the scrutiny moves to Zampano, then Truant, and each of them goes nuts? Makes me think about my own obsessions and what effect they really have on me.
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