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In Watermelon Sugar
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In Watermelon Sugar
In Watermelon Sugar is an American postmodern post-apocalyptic novel by Richard Brautigan written in 1964 and published in 1968.
Set in the aftermath of a fallen civilization, it focuses on a commune organized around a central gathering house which is named "iDEATH". In this environment, many things are made of watermelon sugar (though the inhabitants also use pine wood and stone for building material and fuel made from trout oil). The landscape of the novel is constantly in flux; each day of the week has a different colored sun which creates different colored watermelons, and the central building also changes frequently. The novel's narrator, who is left unnamed, claims to be writing an investigative book on his experiences at iDEATH. Its first-person narrative is sparse and minimalist, granting the novel a detached and alien quality.
A nameless narrator lives a gentle life in a communal settlement called iDEATH, a place where everything is constructed from the sweet substance of watermelon sugar. The sun changes color each day, and the world is filled with rivers, piney woods, and statues commemorating the past. The narrator is writing a book, the twenty-fourth in 171 years, and has recently left his long-time girlfriend, Margaret, for a woman named Pauline, causing tension in their small community.
The story unfolds through the narrator's daily rituals: walks at night, meals at iDEATH, and work at the Watermelon Works. A deep shadow is cast by the memory of the tigers, beautiful, articulate creatures that once killed and ate the narrator's parents but also helped him with his arithmetic before they were hunted to extinction. The last tiger was burned on a pyre, and the trout hatchery at iDEATH was built over the ashes.
The central conflict arises from the life and death of inBOIL, the brother of the community's leader, Charley. Disillusioned with iDEATH, inBOIL forms a drunken gang that lives in shacks near the edge of the mysterious and endless Forgotten Works, a wasteland of discarded and incomprehensible objects from a previous world. They make whiskey from forgotten things, and their behavior becomes increasingly erratic. Margaret is strangely drawn to the Forgotten Works and spends time with inBOIL's gang, collecting artifacts, which creates a rift with the narrator.
The crisis culminates when inBOIL and his men, in a drunken delirium, storm iDEATH to reveal its "true" meaning. Inside the trout hatchery, they declare the dead tigers were the real essence of iDEATH and proceed to ritually mutilate and kill themselves with jackknives, cutting off their thumbs, noses, and ears before bleeding to death. Pauline defiantly mops up their blood, and the bodies are taken back to the Forgotten Works and burned along with their shacks.
In the aftermath, Margaret is ostracized because of her rumored, though unproven, involvement with inBOIL. While looking into the Statue of Mirrors, a reflective surface that shows distant events, the narrator witnesses her suicide. He watches as she hangs herself from an apple tree with a blue scarf. Her body is retrieved, and her room at iDEATH, filled with things from the Forgotten Works, is bricked up forever with silent, black sugar bricks. The story concludes on a black, soundless day with Margaret's funeral. Her body, adorned in robes of glowing foxfire, is placed in a glass tomb at the bottom of a river. The community then prepares for a customary funeral dance, waiting in silence for sound to return to the world so the waltzing can begin. In a final quiet revelation, the narrator notes that Pauline, now sleeping peacefully beside him, was once the mysterious girl with the lantern he always watched on his long night walks.
The concept of iDEATH is subject to various interpretations. It can be seen as a new Eden in a post-apocalyptic world, with the old destroyed world represented by the Forgotten Works, connecting the narrator and his new lover to Adam and Eve. The novel alludes to communal experiments of the 1960s, involving the intersection of nature and technology. For example, the iDEATH building seems to have been constructed around nature, rather than displacing it; the building houses many trees, rocks, a creek, and a trout hatchery. Brautigan himself said he based the book on his life in Bolinas, whose inhabitants were at that time known for their semi-communal and insular ways.[citation needed]
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In Watermelon Sugar
In Watermelon Sugar is an American postmodern post-apocalyptic novel by Richard Brautigan written in 1964 and published in 1968.
Set in the aftermath of a fallen civilization, it focuses on a commune organized around a central gathering house which is named "iDEATH". In this environment, many things are made of watermelon sugar (though the inhabitants also use pine wood and stone for building material and fuel made from trout oil). The landscape of the novel is constantly in flux; each day of the week has a different colored sun which creates different colored watermelons, and the central building also changes frequently. The novel's narrator, who is left unnamed, claims to be writing an investigative book on his experiences at iDEATH. Its first-person narrative is sparse and minimalist, granting the novel a detached and alien quality.
A nameless narrator lives a gentle life in a communal settlement called iDEATH, a place where everything is constructed from the sweet substance of watermelon sugar. The sun changes color each day, and the world is filled with rivers, piney woods, and statues commemorating the past. The narrator is writing a book, the twenty-fourth in 171 years, and has recently left his long-time girlfriend, Margaret, for a woman named Pauline, causing tension in their small community.
The story unfolds through the narrator's daily rituals: walks at night, meals at iDEATH, and work at the Watermelon Works. A deep shadow is cast by the memory of the tigers, beautiful, articulate creatures that once killed and ate the narrator's parents but also helped him with his arithmetic before they were hunted to extinction. The last tiger was burned on a pyre, and the trout hatchery at iDEATH was built over the ashes.
The central conflict arises from the life and death of inBOIL, the brother of the community's leader, Charley. Disillusioned with iDEATH, inBOIL forms a drunken gang that lives in shacks near the edge of the mysterious and endless Forgotten Works, a wasteland of discarded and incomprehensible objects from a previous world. They make whiskey from forgotten things, and their behavior becomes increasingly erratic. Margaret is strangely drawn to the Forgotten Works and spends time with inBOIL's gang, collecting artifacts, which creates a rift with the narrator.
The crisis culminates when inBOIL and his men, in a drunken delirium, storm iDEATH to reveal its "true" meaning. Inside the trout hatchery, they declare the dead tigers were the real essence of iDEATH and proceed to ritually mutilate and kill themselves with jackknives, cutting off their thumbs, noses, and ears before bleeding to death. Pauline defiantly mops up their blood, and the bodies are taken back to the Forgotten Works and burned along with their shacks.
In the aftermath, Margaret is ostracized because of her rumored, though unproven, involvement with inBOIL. While looking into the Statue of Mirrors, a reflective surface that shows distant events, the narrator witnesses her suicide. He watches as she hangs herself from an apple tree with a blue scarf. Her body is retrieved, and her room at iDEATH, filled with things from the Forgotten Works, is bricked up forever with silent, black sugar bricks. The story concludes on a black, soundless day with Margaret's funeral. Her body, adorned in robes of glowing foxfire, is placed in a glass tomb at the bottom of a river. The community then prepares for a customary funeral dance, waiting in silence for sound to return to the world so the waltzing can begin. In a final quiet revelation, the narrator notes that Pauline, now sleeping peacefully beside him, was once the mysterious girl with the lantern he always watched on his long night walks.
The concept of iDEATH is subject to various interpretations. It can be seen as a new Eden in a post-apocalyptic world, with the old destroyed world represented by the Forgotten Works, connecting the narrator and his new lover to Adam and Eve. The novel alludes to communal experiments of the 1960s, involving the intersection of nature and technology. For example, the iDEATH building seems to have been constructed around nature, rather than displacing it; the building houses many trees, rocks, a creek, and a trout hatchery. Brautigan himself said he based the book on his life in Bolinas, whose inhabitants were at that time known for their semi-communal and insular ways.[citation needed]