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Contemporary Fiction Humor Humor & Entertainment Literature & Fiction Religion & SpiritualityI made the mistake of actually trying to read one of Lafferty's more difficult novels, NOT TO MENTION CAMELS. A more logical place to start would be either LAFFERTY IN ORBIT and NINE-HUNDRED GRANDMOTHERS. Both are good places to start begin to fathom what Lafferty is all about. However, both are short-story compilations, and if you don't like short stories and feel you want to experience a novel, then you should try PAST MASTER,...
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My favorite Lafferty novel is Fourth Mansions, but this is a close second. Indelible images and ideas from these two books have forever penetrated my brain. I didn't have any good idea of who Thomas More was when I first read Past Master, other than that he had written Utopia and had perhaps meant it to be ironic. Since then, every bright idea for the future is tagged "utopian" (dark visions like Blade Runner are called dystopias)...
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Past Master takes a rejuvenated Thomas More and places him in a future community which corresponds to his own Utopia. This is a novel full of heavy ideas; perhaps more than it can support; but there is a huge amount here to reward somebody who gives the book the attention it demands.
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