RIP-Avalon Brantley/New Zagava book from Avalon Brantley

Gnosticangel

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I received this notice today, and as a fan of both this author and of WHH's novel, ordered it immediately:

"The House of Silence"

We proudly present Avalon Brantley’s fascinating full length novel, an homage to William Hope Hodgson’s “The House on the Borderland:"

288 pages with illustrations, colored endpapers and silk bookmark, head and tail bands, hardcover binding, available in two limited editions:

a numbered edition of 170 copies in a silvery moonlight-shining cover, plus 26 lettered black edged exemplars, signed by the author, bound in dark green cloth and mulberry tree bark, housed in a cloth-covered clamshell box. To be shipped in March.


Pre-orders at: - Zagava
 
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Re: New Zagava book from Avalon Brantley

Here's an excerpt from a Zagava interview with this author, which may be of interest to TLO members:

Q: Which other writers do you admire in your favorite genres and what especially fascinates you in their works?

A: There are SO many. The sacred books of many religions are a constant preoccupation for me, as are mythology, folklore, alchemy and esoterica. Poetry is an especially indispensable influence on both composition and thought, from ancient poets like Homer, Aneirin and the Gawain poet, to Malory and Milton, to Romantics like Blake, Shelley and Yeats, to Modernists like Pound and Eliot. I should also acknowledge such visionaries as James Thomson, Robert Duncan, Walt Whitman and especially Poe, who was Virgil to my Dante when I first encountered both poetry and fantastic literature, when at the age of six or seven my father began reading him to me.

Dylan Thomas and James Joyce were highly influential in expanding my perception of possibility in language, lending me an ear and eye for hidden gems behind and inside of words. Other favourite authors include Hawthorne, Turgenev, George Eliot, Sir Walter Scott, Borges and Schulz.

In terms of mystical literature, I should mention Jakob Boehme, Thomas Taylor, Crowley, Waite, Kenneth Grant and Jung, and Blake again. Robert Graves, J.G. Frazer, the Grimms, Hoffmann, Lady Gregory and William Morris also helped broaden my horizons by bringing new blood to old tales. I am also enamoured of old Sagas and transcriptions of oral poetry such as the Finnish Kalevala, Ukrainian minstrelsy, and the bardic poetry and ballads of various places and times.

In the realm of weird fiction, M.R. James, Blackwood, Hodgson, Thomas Owen, De La Mare, Dunsany and Chambers are important past masters to me. More recent ones include Wellman, Bradbury, Clark Ashton Smith and Seabury Quinn (his non-De Grandin stories), as well as contemporary magisters such as Ramsey Campbell, Mark Valentine, Reggie Oliver and D.P. Watt.

Q: You contributed to Hieroglyphic's acclaimed tribute to Arthur Machen. How important are his books for you?

A: I feel a profound affinity for Machen. I think he was a very gentle soul, sorely misunderstood in his time. Machen falls into an old mystical tradition of letters, more fitting I think in the company of Blake and Yeats than with Lovecraft or Ligotti. “The White people”, “The Great Return”, “The Hill of Dreams” and “The Secret Glory” are indispensably beautiful to me. I also found his early years and largely forgotten “Chronicle of Clemendy” endearing for what it was....


More at:
Authors - Zagava
 
Re: New Zagava book from Avalon Brantley

According to her blog she finished this book in 2013.

There's two cheap anthologies called Legendary and Dark Light 3. Haven't heard of the authors in either apart from her.
 
Re: New Zagava book from Avalon Brantley

Hello! Thank you so much for your posts about The House of Silence. It's a very glad day for me... novels are not so easily published anymore, and I am very fortunate to have a story I put so much heart into released by a press with so much integrity and heart of its own.

I am also excited to mention that a forthcoming issue of Zagava's Infra Noir magazine will feature an expository treatise exploring much that lies beneath the surface in The House of Silence....

As to those two little anthologies, Dark Light 3 was an early place I landed work as a brand new writer looking for any port at which to dock. The piece in there, "Hognissaga", was substantially revised for inclusion in Descended Suns Resuscitate, released a couple years ago when Zagava and Ex Occidente were still partners. As to the Legendary anthology, the same reasons apply to that story's placement. I will probably revise and republish that tale (a dark Irish mysthical piece called "The Morrigu") somewhere a little more familiar in the near future.

Again, thank you for supporting this book. I dearly hope you enjoy it and would love to hear from you when you've read it if you feel at all inclined.

Avy
 
Re: New Zagava book from Avalon Brantley

Sagapharmakis wrote, "I am also excited to mention that a forthcoming issue of Zagava's Infra Noir magazine will feature an expository treatise exploring much that lies beneath the surface in The House of Silence...."

That sounds fascinating! However I cannot find any reference to the magazine on Zagava's web site. Is there a link available?
 
Re: New Zagava book from Avalon Brantley

No, no link yet. And I feel it is not really my place
to say much. All I know is that the first issue is being worked on presently. The exposition is complete and in their hands, where it was favourably received. There will be other contributions by indispensable writers in our field as well, so regardless it will be a very desirable release. :-)
 
Re: New Zagava book from Avalon Brantley

Thank you for your most kind words!

Infra Noir is a literary gazette still in it´s early planning stages. The wonderful Jonathan Wood and Alcebiades Diniz kindly agreed to be the editors and publication is planned for summer.
More details will follow soon.

All my best wishes,
Jonas
- Zagava
 
Re: New Zagava book from Avalon Brantley

'R.I.P Avalon Brantley

Dear Friends,
It is with deep sadness and regret that I inform you of Avalon’s passing. Avy’s light went out on March 5, 2017 and with her went her limitless talent and the possibilities of future works that I believe would have continued to illuminate the literary world. She was hopeful and excited about her forthcoming piece, The House of Silence. She hoped you would enjoy it. It was her pleasure to bring it to life.

Rest in peace.
1981 – 2017'


Copied from post on Avalon Brantley's blog.
 
Re: New Zagava book from Avalon Brantley

That is terrible news! I don't have words.....

We've lost a wonderful writer and (as Sagapharmakis) a TLO member.

RIP Avalon.
 
Re: New Zagava book from Avalon Brantley

There are posts from her on this very thread, dated only a few weeks ago too.
There is no further news regarding the circumstances at this time; just what was included in the blog post I shared.
 
Re: New Zagava book from Avalon Brantley

There are posts from her on this very thread, dated only a few weeks ago too.
There is no further news regarding the circumstances at this time; just what was included in the blog post I shared.

That's quite sobering. My condolences.
 
Re: New Zagava book from Avalon Brantley

It is very sad news whenever an author passes.

I hope to read her writings one day.

Rest in peace.
 
Re: New Zagava book from Avalon Brantley

"They aren't quite like ours, those other stars." - Navas.

I very much hope she is with other stars now.
 
Re: New Zagava book from Avalon Brantley

Very sad news.

Avalon was one of the most interesting and talented writers to emerge from the Ex Occidente/Zagava nexus.

I'm particularly fond of 'Aornos' her strange and completely unclassifiable piece of Greek drama redivivus.
 
Re: New Zagava book from Avalon Brantley

Derek wrote, "I'm particularly fond of 'Aornos' her strange and completely unclassifiable piece of Greek drama redivivus."

I, too, am very fond of Aornos. For those interested here is Des Lewis' evocative review of the work:

AORNOS Avalon Brantley | GESTALT REAL-TIME REVIEWS: Dreamcatcher of Fiction Books

And here is the author's very interesting response to that review, located here on TLO:

THE NIGHTMARE NETWORK - View Single Post - Ex Occidente Press

Her passing is a sad loss.
 
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I am still at loss of words..... Avy was a wonderful friend and I will miss her dearly.

Alcebiades Diniz kindly wrote an obituary "which is a great and perceptive labour of love for the qualities of Avalon Brantley and her literary legacy." (Jonathan Wood)

[FONT=Helvetica, serif][FONT=Helvetica Neue, serif]Analogies and the Shock of Reality
(about Avalon Brantley)
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[FONT=Helvetica, serif][FONT=Helvetica Neue, serif]"Every poem, in time, becomes an elegy. (…) There are no other paradises besides the lost ones." Jorge Luis Borges, “Posesión del Ayer” (The Possession of Yesterday)[/FONT][/FONT]


[FONT=Helvetica Neue, serif] There are certain moments in our existence in which we plunge into some kind of abysmal contemplation, into the pure despair in the search for complex, definitive senses. These are the moments when, awake, we seem to have just emerged from a nightmare, those richly ornamented with sinister details of which we retain only a small part, which allows our awakening to be bitter, a rather poor relief. In these moments we think of certain abstractions, perhaps of our mortality (or the mortality of all beings, or of those we eventually love), but our thoughts are focused, with special acuteness, on the fortuitous character of existence and a certain notion of justice, and logic. Chaotic causality appears, in our eyes, as diabolical; because we seek an understanding that escapes from our hands, ruthlessly, so that a new world rises on our horizon, a world more sad and rough. We would like the world to obey the most beneficial arrangement possible, but this happy thought is just that: a ghost generated by anxiety in controlling the devastation of our grief. I can say that this dizzying sensation, so tricky to define and that seems to lead our consciousness to continuous dead ends, was that I felt at the knowledge of the death of Avalon Brantley, brilliant young talent who was not limited to the universe Literary that the French call littérature fantastique, but which expanded in a complex way by multiple and diversified landscapes.
But, perhaps, this feeling that I have tried to describe above, in this case, can be classified as just an indiscretion on my part. For indeed, I was not a close or dear friend to Avalon Brantley. I have not even met her in person: our communication can be summed up by the exchange of electronic messages – some of them related to her participation in the Booklore collection – and an excellent interview that she gave me and which is published on my blog. It is necessary to emphasize that this meagre direct communication gave me the impression that Avalon was a person of good will, sensitive and of kind-hearted. In any case, I know little of her physical appearance, personal tastes, political choices or daily dramas. I was not part of her inner circle of friends and family, nor was I aware of the pain of the members of that circle, especially when they discovered her death. However, in fact, there was a possible connection, the only one in such cases, that established itself from a remote or recent past, between the creator of a story and the one who appreciates that work. For the extraordinary writings of Avalon enable an incredible experience to the reader – therefore a peculiar and intense communion. I remember the vivid impression of reading what I consider – from my point of view as a reader – to be Avalon's first masterpiece, coincidently her first published work, the Aornos tragedy, published in 2013. I hold dearest memories of the little books in this series, of the few that I have acquired, so precious and beautiful, and which were fundamental in many later decisions of my life. But I must return to Aornos: it is a tragedy, a play but, in fact, it goes directly to the reader who flips through its ardent pages, proposing an extremely exquisite and daring experience, a visionary form of Theater for the mind, so complex in evoking its elements and in the effect of its irony. The flow of the mythological and religious elements of antiquity is intoxicating; It seems that we are facing some lost and particularly perverse creation by some author of ancient Greece. It is very difficult to escape the sense of destructive inevitability of fate when, at the end of the play, we find ourselves like that chorus of cicadas conjuring the presence of a fearsome female in a catastrophe nourished by true love.
That was only the first book by Avalon, her spectacular presentation to the world; other creations would emerge, both materialized in books and contributions to collections. Unfortunately, I do not own all these works – I am not a consummate collector, specializing in completing a given collection of literary butterflies, such as those editors chosen to preface the complete editions of certain authors in the series “Bibliothèque de la Pléiade”. But some of them, which deserve mention, I had the pleasure and honor to read. All these works point out a secure fluidity between different genres, formats and conceptions – some of extreme radicalism – but also an acute perception of the ironic, cruel traps of fate that the author had already so well represented in Aornos from the tragic perception of existence nurtured in antiquity. Thus, shortly after Aornos, we have a collection of short stories, Descended Suns Resuscitate. The golden cover has a marbled texture that is extraordinarily tactile, while a small circular hole points to the symbolic and photographic clue to certain elements of the book, notably a certain atmosphere of inevitable, painful nostalgia. The tales, set in floating historical landscapes, are dominated at the same time by the overwhelming perception of fate and a really exquisite sense of humor. In this sense, it is worth mentioning a narrative like "The Last Sheaf”, which presents a balance between these two poles that were obsessively revisited by the author. The final tale, called "Kali-Yuga", presents this visionary characterization that already transpired in Aornos and that would grow in terms of conceptual sophistication in her later writings. Apparently dissatisfied with the tragic closure offered by fate in its cunning configurations, she would seek in the image of creation/destruction, increasingly freed from its limitations, new syntheses.
Thus, the next release would be Transcensience, the penultimate full book of Avalon, written in collaboration with Locket Hollis. The book jacket in neutral, icy, creamy color, revealing Egon Schiele's fine incisive features and the initials of the author and co-author on the spine, just AB/LH. In the frontispiece, very appropriately, a frame of the film Le Sang d'un poete, by Jean Cocteau. In the book, brief narratives, poems and poetry in prose alternating, making the book unstable, a challenge to this perennial search by every reader for something near to the sense of fullness and harmony, the security of stability in literary terms. But instability isn’t the same as inconsistency, the fragility hidden by the mask of certain formal dances; on the contrary, the book presents a thematic identity around the idea of death, of the passage, of the threshold, of the ineluctable. In this sense, there is a constant fluctuation in the approach of these concepts, between poetic subjectivity and narrative objectivity, between the pathos of poetry and the necessity of verisimilitude eventually imposed by the narrative. The heart of the book is precisely the brief narrative "The Far Rest", a title that carries a anagrammatic game with the threatening "forest" that haunts the whole tale. By breaking the boundaries between poetic subjectivity and narrative objectivity, Avalon reaches the paroxysm of despair in this brief narrative, culminating in an utterly visceral longing – which is expressed by a fragmented language – by a lovely, immense potential god. It is a deepening and subversion of what we have seen so far in Avalon, from Aornos; for it, at the same time, has subverted the general boundaries between narrative and poetics in the same way that it recovers some of the deepest yearnings and anxieties of the literature of the past. What she had done with the Greek tragedy, she accomplished, in Transcensience, with the romantic poetry of the nineteenth century. But the truth is that the deepening imagery and the increasingly direct narrative formulation of despair showed, indirectly perhaps, her suffering, a suffering that threatened to isolate her subjectivity definitively, with the ultimate abandonment of writing.
However that was not what happened. I mentioned Avalon's various contributions to collections published by small publishers in 2016 and early 2017, a “particularly productive year” in Avalon's own words. They are small jewels not only in the sense of the astounding quality of this material but also by the altruistic nobility expressed in her will to expose the demons themselves, to exorcise them, to sublimate them into literary works, for the scrutiny of the public, that she sensed perhaps sensitive. Among these material, I would like to highlight three extraordinary creations whose analytical reading could indeed feed into academic research if it were not so far removed from the more vanguardist reality of literature by the compact walls of self-complacency. The first of them is "Nocternity", which presents the most visionary side of Avalon already in its title, a strange fusion between "Nocturnal" and "Eternity". The tendencies of Transcensience become even more radical: the alternation between verse and prose builds less a dance between poetry and prose and much more a kind of liturgical hymn, the multilayered evocation of new and old gods. That is, a unique construction because of its intricacy, which plunges the reader into myth directly, abandoning the usual conventions of literary genre. But this diving would be the prelude to an even more ambitious work: "Corpus". According to the author herself, the inspiration for "Corpus" (the very significant subtitle is "A Mandala of Anatomy and Metaphysiology") came from certain works by Andrei Biely, such as Kotik Letaev and Glossolalia. It is the author's version of the biblical Genesis, a union between the broad perspective of the universe and the intimate development of consciousness in a unique form of synchrony, in which language fragments into pieces corresponding to sensations, to the potential link between the boundless and most profoundly personal. The editors perceived the importance of this piece, so original: in fact, “Corpus” not only follows a unique format within the collection (in two columns), but is the only one immediately illustrated. In a way, it is the apex of visionary work and the subversion of literary forms and genres by Avalon. It would be expected that the author would later adopt more and more radical forms of disruption with narrative and poetic structures and even with language. But behold, the multifaceted personality of Avalon arises and presses into another, somewhat surprising, way. It is a path subtly indicated by herself at the end of her extraordinary mandala, when she states "god left the house”.
This path begins to be indicated in the third piece I selected, "A Dead Man's House”. After experiments in the borders of language and the subversion of the usual literary structures, Avalon returns to the fantastic tale, a genre that she has approached so skillfully in her Descended Suns Resuscitate. "A Dead Man's House” is a tale about the potential existence of books considered lost, with astounding developments and speculation. The reader's imagination is spurred on by the imaginary reconstruction of such vanished volumes which, in the end, receive a fateful and liberating destiny, a spectacular auto-de-fé in the same vein of previous rituals performed by Elias Canetti in Die Blendung and Jakob Wasserman in Das Gänsemännchen. This renewed return to narrative sources, on the other hand, marks the last book of Avalon, the novel The House of Silence. It is, at first glance, a tribute to William Hope Hodgson, especially to his The House of the Borderland. But the last story (which, curiously, would be her first novel) of Avalon is much more than that; a visionary narrative, although quite simple, that takes up with great freedom the tropes of the weird and horror genre. The visionary radicalism of the author's earlier works, which seek a break in the relationship between language and objective/subjective reality, still manifests itself here (there was also something of this breakdown in the narrator's role in "A Dead Man's House") but in a subtle and controlled way. It is in the dream universe and in the sensory perceptions (even the simplest) of the protagonist and of the other characters that one realizes the potentiality of this break in the fabric of the real. Revealing to the reader the horror of the limits of perception and rationality in a cadenced rhythm, by its perceptible edges, Avalon revealed an extraordinary awareness in the construction of this long and fascinating narrative – her last one, unfortunately.
In her work, Avalon Brantley demonstrated the limits of language and perception, the misleading separation between the individual microcosm and the collective macrocosm, the subtle and sadistic traps of fate, the abysmal and evocative vertigo of the Vision, this form of apprehension of universal knowledge adopted by Swedenborg or Blake or so many others before herself (and many others later, I hope). The rereading of her work becomes a painful and moving exercise in the light of her death, but we must interpret it further, for death – in more than one sense – is not the end. Pier Paolo Pasolini understood death as a final cut in the long take of life; a final cut that concatenated the previous acts in an edition full of meaning. We could go further (inspired even by Pasolini's own terrible death): the definitive cut in the film of life with the death is in some cases an enigmatic product whose apparently clear sense holds as many possibilities as secrets. Following this line of thought, though the shock of loss may exist, Avalon left a long and enigmatic narrative represented by her works and the mysteries of her sadly short existence. And even though I regret not knowing her better, I know that I can revisit the brilliant, animated by a everlasting fresh existence in her works.[/FONT]

[FONT=Helvetica, serif][FONT=Helvetica Neue, serif]Not by chance, one of Avalon's last testimonies makes it very clear that she, like Blanqui and Nietzsche (or Borges), believed in the infinite plurality of worlds, of existences, of lives. In one of these plural worlds she continues to build her work, sung by aoidos and other vagabonds or poets like the songs of a close brother, Homer.[/FONT][/FONT]
 
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