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Paperback Plexus: The Rosy Crucifixion II Book

ISBN: 0802151795

ISBN13: 9780802151797

Plexus: The Rosy Crucifixion II

(Book #2 in the The Rosy Crucifixion Series)

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

"Plexus is the core volume in The Rosy Crucifixion: the volume which has the most complete description of Henry Miller's basic values, beliefs, opinions, judgments, both at the time of his "Crucifixion" and at the later time when the trilogy was written. Plexus is simply the most marvelous volume of emotion and ideas and visions and nightmares about man and society in the twentieth century--with art as the link perhaps, or as...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

A Coming of Age Masterpiece for Artists

Miller represents the torment of many aspiring artists and writers: his insight into the human soul as he sees it and his ability to craft words to illuminate this insight are remarkable. Yet in spite of this mastery, he still writes with a profound sense of humility and suffers in his own miserable imperfections. He is hopelessly in love with a woman he knows is a liar and a cheat; he assails his own failure to provide for himself in a dignified way; he struggles with the validity of his personal friendships. In the midst of all this anxiety swirling within the deep intellect is a sincere and almost childlike love of life and decadence which he refused to deny himself even in the most impoverished times.The final pages of Plexus define for the reader what is meant by "The Rosy Crucifixion." (If they haven't already figured it out by then.) To relate to the message is the key to the trilogy. If it moves you to tears, consider throwing away your own cosmococcic baggage and start off to something of a higher order of blissful, ecstatic and painful life.

an experience of language and life.a masterpiece.

the follow up to SEXUS, NEXUS does not pale by comparison nor does henry millers creativity wither with age. millers sense of story has been born out of the womb of SEXUS and grows into a teenager with a rampant unforgiving vocabulary and undaunted travels into the psyches of his many muses. i use the word muses instead of characters for thus far into the trilogy he does not concentrate nor devote more time to one person. all characters are probed lovingly by miller and splashed on paper raw and very real making each an unforgettable icon. miller understands and is not afraid to deliver the human condition and with the expansive array of displayed human condition, it is a good thing miller has the vocabulary to describe it.

A brilliant perspective on life

Plexus is the central novel in Henry Miller's trilogy, known as the Rosy Crucifixion. The Crucifixion (along with most of Miller's work) is autobiographical and deals with the turning point in his life where, Miller realizes he isn't happy with his life and, in consequence, takes the drastic measures of quitting his job at the Cosmodemonic Telegraph Company and leaving his wife to begin an unknown life as an "artist" with a beautiful and mysterious woman named Mora (later changed to Mona), who becomes his muse.Plexus takes place in the midst of this chaotic metamorphosis with its sublime highs and miserable lows. Despite the lows Miller's voice is ecstatic and continually praising life. The Crucifixion is a love story - obsessive unconditional love: the love of Mona despite her flaws, the love of life despite its flaws, and the love of the English language (have a dictionary nearby). His happiness comes from his slow progression toward his true vocation, writing. Miller spends most of his life during the period of the trilogy doing everything except writing, but this is the artistic-procrastinator's process: delay the actual work while imagining it done to perfection until the last possible moment when failure is imminent and then, casting all other things aside, immerse yourself in the creation of an approximation of that imagined perfect model. I've read the trilogy twice and three other works by Miller, but Plexus has remained my favorite. The Crucifixion is definitely a more mature work compared to his earlier novels such as Tropic of Cancer. The story flows and the characters are well developed. The trilogy isn't for everybody. For those who aren't happy with their 9-to-5 job and have an inner burning to write the perfect novel or paint that masterpiece it might just be the inspiration they need to take the ultimate plunge. Although Plexus isn't the first novel in the Trilogy it's a fine place to start especially for those that might be turned off by the abundant sex in the beginning of Sexus. If you have artistic urges and can't find the time to pursue them then read the trilogy. When you're done look at your own life - compare it to where you need to be - and make the plunge. It will probably be a long hard change, but if you're honest with yourself chances are you'll come out rosy.

Henry Miller is the dark prince of American prose!!!

Once you read Plexus your life will never be the same. It will haunt day and night. The language! The perpetual orgies and the endless prophecies. Miller understood the most basic, and yet the most difficult to grasp element of human life: the desire to be free. Miller wrote against the tide and won. He wrote about the darkness of America before it was fashionable to do so. He exposed the evil and the goodnes. He lived life in the margins of society, but never once complained. He was a bum with a silver tongue. Happy for he never surrender his soul to conformists and inquisitors. Hemingway and Fitzgerald are clowns in comparison. Miller was a true poet. A man who simply wrote for the sake of the word. Writers like Miller only show up once or twice every century. Read him!!! He will set you free.
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