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Gowanus Canal, Hans Knudsen by Tod Thilleman
ISBN 1-933132-00-0      $14.00 US   |     $18.95  CAN        304 pages


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One of the major performances of Gowanus is, at least for me, the irritation it should provoke
to the bourgeois reader in the same way the surrealist and the dada writers, to bring here just
the name of Boris Vian in L’arrache-coeur, did.
... Thilleman’s book clearly proves the dynamic
character of reasoning over against the static character of facts. The rich referential dimension
of reasoning--which obviously upstages the inferential dimension of facts--is reduced to simple pretext.
And this is,
without a doubt, a strange victory against any traditional epic!    D. R. Popa, author of Lady V.

Gowanus is at times hilarious and at others edifying, slyly taking on complicated questions
of art and religion—buried as they are in Knudsen's rambling bluster.  Jonathon Messinger, Time Out Chicago

Gowanus Canal, Hans Knudsen is a novel of ideas unlike most written these days.
Knudsen is a new Stephen Daedalus—but lacking a coherent tradition to rebel
against as he misfires his way through doctrine and avant garde theatre into a deep
sadness, one that exists in direct confrontation with the elated “new new world” of
late capitalism. In Knudsen’s world people speak in fits and starts, and understand
one another little better.  In his portrait of a character ground down in a world where
logos have replaced logos, Thilleman gives us a compelling novel, leaving us to
clutch after what really matters.  Ted Pelton, author of Malcolm & Jack

Communication becomes a comic routine, more often than not, played purely for laughs….
And it is not merely the pretentious theatre people, there is little meaningful communication
between any of the characters in the book, whether it’s the…kitchen worker who insists that
he has done his half of the closing chores, the Yugoslavian immigrant who is pitching a play
about Tito as a hero of the people, the waitress who wants praise for her photos, the Professor
of Theology who uses the Thirty Nine Articles as a club to beat down opposition….Knudsen’s
own communication often borders on the absurd. At times pretentious: “Abstract isn’t bad as
long as we understand collectively what abstract actually means. If we visualize it and not
relegate it a concept or some such.” Jack Goodstein/Compulsive Reader (link)

Cogito ergo sum. But for us postmoderns that’s not enough because one might get involved
in an aleatory theatrical performance and the dictum could change into something like “I
act and therefore am nothing real.” As an oddball Christian, I much admired the honest handling
of theology and its discontents. For Nietzsche, the death of God opened the way for the
creation of the Ubermensch. (Never mind the stupid-ass Nazi's who never got anything
right—Nietzsche, Wagner, Beethoven.) But for us postmoderns the death of God tends
to open only the abyss.  Eugene Garber, author of Vienna ØØ

Not since Susan Sontag’s debut with The Benefactor has a first novel been so convincing.
Welcome to a powerful new voice!   
Edward Field, author of The Man Who Would Marry Susan Sontag


Asks the age-old question: Which is more powerfulFire and brimstone or piss and vinegar?
The result is a smoldering, powerful mixture of unforgettably poetic language, absurd
reality and East Village experimental theater.Gowanus isn't afraid to ask life's big questions and
have fun with the myriad of possible answers.   Aaron Zimmerman, author of By The Time You Finish This
Book You Might Be Dead

Gowanus is serious, profound, and horrifying in its indictment of the various poisons
in which we swim. I'm reading Domby and Son just now, and Thilleman’s sections
on the canal per se are nothing short of Dickens' tour de force on the toxic railroad. The
language Gowanus employs ranges from incisive to superb, images that are often startling
and unique. The world it explores—even though it is so physically constricted—contains
many worlds of culture and feeling from lowest to highest, from rank to sublime, each tainted,
one with the other. Marc Estrin, author of Insect Dreams

On the banks of Gowanus Canal, a fetid stream in a squalid Brooklyn neighborhood,
Hans Knudsen, son of a liberal Lutheran minister, seeks among the warring pressures of
consubstantiation, transsubstantiation, and no-substantiation, the old world and the new-new
world, the ideal and the real, the Cogito and the un-self, Martin Luther and Descartes, the
abstract and the concrete, for a way into modern, post-religious culture, hope, and life.
Among such streets as filthy Luquer Street, in consort with such characters as Ms. Dubias,
and searching for consolation in the muddy waters of the Gowanus Canal, Hans Knudsen
disappears into a world occasionally enlightened by irrational brightness, often descending
into beautiful (beatific) melancholies. With the quickstep of a few overall and some internal
literary inventions, Tod Thilleman has written not so much a novel as an investigation, a
bildungsroman whose hero has no magic mountain to ascend or descend, but who yet
desires that the intellectual and spiritual contexts for a life might still exist. Martin Nakell, author of
Two Fields That Face and Mirror Each Other

Thilleman's bildungsroman is an astonishing mix of philosophy and obsession. It will
stay in your thoughts like an erotic dream.
Harriet Sohmers Zwerling, author of Notes of a Nude Model and Other Pieces

What a read.  A staggering, stunning book. Its eventual readership will bring it into a final
focus, for, from the way i read it, it takes a while to settle.  I was reminded of two classical
writers—voltaire and knut hamsun—the latter a nobelist who died in the l950s after espousing
the nazi cause!  But his novel “hunger” was an enthralling experience when I read it years
before the war. That nameless narrator reminds me so much of Hans, and Hans’s ups and
downs and various run-ins reminded me of Candide and his little company.  Jack Walters , author of Saigon & Other Poems