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The Cornelius Quartet: The Final Program, A…
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The Cornelius Quartet: The Final Program, A Cure for Cancer, The English Assassin, The Condition of Muzak (Final Programme) (2001. Auflage)

von Michael Moorcock (Autor)

Reihen: The Cornelius Chronicles (Omnibus 1-4), Der ewige Held (Jerry Cornelius Quartet 1-4)

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Jerry Cornelius is an English assassin, physicist, rock star, and messiah to the Age of Science. Written between 1965 and 1967, this sequence of four novels relating Cornelius's adventures has been credited with inspiring dozens of writers and artists to rethink the genre of science fiction. Acclaimed British author Michael Moorcock's time-tripping antihero is one of the great achievements in modern fantastic literature. This is the first U.S. publication of one of the most influential sagas in postmodern sci-fi.… (mehr)
Mitglied:joshuagomez
Titel:The Cornelius Quartet: The Final Program, A Cure for Cancer, The English Assassin, The Condition of Muzak (Final Programme)
Autoren:Michael Moorcock (Autor)
Info:Thunder's Mouth Press / Four Walls Eight Windows (2001), Edition: New Ed, 855 pages
Sammlungen:Deine Bibliothek
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Tags:to-read, league-of-extraordinary-gentlemen

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The Cornelius Quartet: The Final Program, a Cure for Cancer, the English Assissin, the Condition of Muzak: "The Final Pr von Michael Moorcock

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Individual stars for the parts (so far):
The Final Program **, A Cure for Cancer **, The English Assassin *, The Condition of Muzak **

Avant-garde 1970s SF = incomprehensible mishmash of story, time and dimension jumps. I read other Moorcock fantasy and SF series decades ago and don't remember any of them being this bad. I did force myself to finish the whole 950+ pages though and the appendix of all the different incarnations of Jerry Cornelius did help a bit.

Bought this used and the cover has fallen off, it's just going in recycling when I'm done with it. At least that will put the paper to better use. ( )
  SF_fan_mae | Nov 8, 2018 |
My reactions to reading this omnibus in 1999. Spoilers follow.

“The Repossession of Jerry Cornelius”, John Clute -- While I find Clute’s very useful in The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (the shorter format curbs his excesses), I find his book reviews less than useful with his self-confessed fondness for obscure words and extended metaphors. I don’t know if Moorcock commissioned this introduction to the omnibus or if Clute’s opinions on these four novels bear any resemblance to the book. From what I gather, Clute (a resident of London where this piece was written and where Moorcock was born, lived a number of years, and has written about) views these novels as a metaphor for city life in London from 1965 to 1977, the span of years in which these novels were written. (And, to a lesser extent, a comment on the contemporary scene in Europe and worldwide.) I don’t agree with Clute’s sociological observation that life in the city is theatrical and involves putting on personas to perform on the metro stage (at least no more than personas are adapted in any social setting). It also seems that Clute is implying that The Condition of Muzak, the fourth novel in the series, may imply that the previous three books are the daydreams of a loser Jerry Cornelius.

The Final Programme -- I enjoyed this novel (and certainly found it more enjoyable than Moorcock’s The Black Corridor and The Distant Suns) but found it oddly structured. It’s light and airy, the dialogue archly ironic and droll, and easy to read, but I never got the feeling of building up to a climax. In fact, since I had seen a film adaptation of this novel, I expected the final ending of Jerry Cornelius (a sometimes callous and ruthless figure given to incest with his sister and, like Moorcock’s Elric, vampirically feeding off others – albeit with no instrumentality like Stormbringer) merging with Miss Brunner to become a hermaphrodite. However, despite all the talk of a new world emerging, the cycle of time perhaps being broken, and millions following “Cornelius Brunner” into the sea to their deaths (and plague breaking out all over Europe), I never got the sense of a new order (or, at the very least, a significant new order) emerging. The idea of a dream being used to create a new social order is something in many of the Eternal Champion stories, but I couldn’t tell if Cornelius was an agent of Law or Chaos, or just the new. I’ve seen it claimed that Cornelius was a proto-cyberpunk hero. I doubt that he had much influence and, if he did, it probably was the importance of contemporary popular culture, an international setting, trade and brand names (Moorcock probably was inspired by Ian Fleming in this since the James Bond series, partially parodied here, was big on brand names), and fashion (meticulously described here). Cornelius probably has his place amongst sf characters (this omnibus if frequently cited in lists of classic sf.) because it so stridently (and was probably the first to do so) tries to capture its time and the portents that seemed to be in the air of the very influential sixties' London.

A Cure for Cancer -- This novel starts with a list of acknowledgments for the source of quotes used and the note: “This book has an unconventional structure.” I think it would be more accurate to say it has almost no structure or, more precisely, almost nothing in the way of a comprehensible plot. It seems to involve Jerry Cornelius tampering with cycles of time (a feature of the nearly contemporaneous Dancers At the End of Time by Moorcock) in order to gather enough energy together to briefly resurrect his sister Catherine. We never really understand the aims of the organization Cornelius ostensibly works for. It seems to be preparing enough people to survive the tampering with the multiverse Cornelius at story’s end. Nor is a comprehensible goal given for his opposition. Bishop Beesly seems to want to impose an antiquated moral order on a changing world. If you want to interpret the novel that way, Cornelius is, again, an Eternal Champion whose efforts favor chaos in order to bring on a new, but not totally chaotic, world. Jerry seems at home with entropy and, in a certain sense, is its agent. He, in one scene, destroys a stack of 78 RPM records for no reason. At novel's end, there is a wintery scene reflecting, in part, a bit of the heat death of the universe. The relationship between this Jerry Cornelius and the Cornelius in the proceeding The Final Programme is puzzling. Here Cornelius is a black man inhabiting a world that fought a different World War One than ours and, in a Vietnam-like scenario (if this novel can said to be about anything, it is Vietnam. The longest chapter in the novel, “Gallagher to Form Label in Thrust Overseas by MCA”, seems to be a commentary on America’s conduct in Vietnam), America and Israel are fighting a war with each other in Europe. Catherine Cornelius is also dead, killed by Jerry. On the other hand, Frank Cornelius (he and Jerry are almost as murderous towards one another as in The Final Programme) is alive. He is allied with others in a vaguely explained opposition to be his brother. Like the first book (this one even owes more to Alfred Bester with its typographic experiments), it was quick and easy to read but ultimately very disappointing in terms of a comprehensible story. J. G. Ballard seems to have been the inspiration (and perhaps John Brunner) for the quotes of articles and ads. Evidently, Moorcock thought the illustrations, since they were reprinted in this paperback edition (an unusual step), integral to the story though I didn’t think they added much.

The English Assassin -- I confess to being utterly baffled by this book and unable to provide a coherent plot description. It features (and the first book in the series, The Final Programme does too) even more characters from Moorcock’s Oswald Bastable books (a series started after the Cornelius books), 1971 to be exact, and concluding after it in 1981 – The Dancers at the End of Time series was also written about the time of the Cornelius books): lovely, interesting, bisexual Una Persson (revolutionary and singer); physicist Hira, the Beesleys; Marke; Nyes. Apart from the references to a continuing cast of characters, particularly Catherine Cornelius with whom he has an incestuous affair, there is little to link this book to the preceding Jerry Cornelius books. Most of the chapters feature odd mélanges of alternate histories (usually with references to real musicians and pieces of music) that are not often consistent with other chapters. Every so often are chapters listed as “Alternate Apocalypse” which may be ends of the world as imagined by Cornelius. Indeed, for most of this novel, Jerry is an off stage character (except the one notable scene where he sabotages a peace conference packed with characters from his series and real people). Most of the novel’s events involve carting Cornelius’ body around, rescuing it, or reviving it. A theme of miserable children – or, more particularly, killed children -- winds its way through the book in the form of excerpted newspaper articles. A memoir (I have no idea if it is a creation of Moorcock’s or not) by Maurice Lescoq talking about his childhood also emphasizes this theme. Perhaps, just as children are largely at the mercy of adults, we are to see Jerry as like a child largely at the mercy of others. I certainly didn’t have a bad time reading this. I just am not sure what I read.

The Condition of Muzak -- Well, this novel was more comprehensible than its two predecessors – A Cure for Cancer and The English Assassin. While I’m not sure what the ultimate meaning or point of the novel was. I think I have some clue as to what Moorcock attempted here. (I also cheated a bit and looked up interview with Moorcok and information on Commedia d’ll Arte, English Pantomime, and the characters Pierrot, Harlequin and Columbine in Harlequin dramas.) The title of the novel is a play or a quote from one Pater that “All art constantly aspires toward the condition of music.” By substituting “Muzak” – the industrial, functional, bland version of music – music to work by and not listen to – for “music”, Moorcock seems to suggest a couple of things. Pater’s quote goes on to remark that, unlike all other arts, the subject and form of music can not be separated. If this novel (and Moorcock makes a few references to Charles St. Ives, whose music, I understand, is chaotic in parts), seems disjointed, a series of chaotic adventures in which Jerry Cornelius participates in quickly depicted wars (mostly of colonial liberation) and political struggles in various alternate timetracks, it is because, in Moorcock’s mind, that is precisely the state of the world in 1977, the chaos of form echoes chaos of subject. Major Nye, at one point, remarks that Jerry is a mythic symbol of his time, a man utterly at home and happy in what, to others, is a terrifying urban environment. To Jerry, technology is not to be understood or employed usefully, it isan aesthetic end itself, a fashion statement (and many chapter headings, especially in the second part of the novel, deal with military technology). Jerry is a mythic figuring (thus Appendix I at novel’s end where Moorcock has a list of mock quotes documenting appearances of one Jerry Cornelius – usually as revolutionary, assassin, or spy but sometimes as businessman, victim, or killer – from 1900 to 1968) bringing chaos wherever he goes, thwarting the various schemes and political plans of Bishop Beesly and Mrs. Brunner who always have some grand theory of human nature and political order and plans to bring it about. The novel has allusions to characters and events from, the first Cornelius novel, The Final Programme. The last part of the novel explicitly alludes to pantomime plays with Una Persson as the Harlequin (and, seemingly, Jerry at times), Jerry as Pierrot, and Catherine Cornelius as Columbine. Evidently pantomime plays started out a bit like Cinderella and then, after some transforming event, became slapstick with Pierrot getting the girl. The transforming event in this plot is easy to spot – it’s the Reunion Party where seemingly every character (at least those around at the time of composition) from Moorcock’s Multiverse puts in an appearance. However, the slapstick aspects of Jerry’s cross time adventures are prevalent in the first half of the novel. Evidently, Commedia d’ll Arte feature many plots with the same characters which is, of course, a very good description of Moorcock’s multiverse, and Moorcock has explicitly acknowledged the inspiration. I’m not really sure, apart from that general fact, what the Harlequin stories have to do with Jerry, especially since he sleeps with lover-sister-Columbine Catherine throughout the series. Of course, as revealed in this novel (and mentioned in John Clute’s introduction to this omnibus edition), all the books may be the daydreams of a poor teenager in London, a would be rock star named Jerry Cornelius who is trying to get a gig for his band. The City of the Future of one Jerry may just be the fantasy of this Jerry Cornelius when he stumbles into a successful acting career. Perhaps the collapsing options in life as we more away from youth reflect Jerry’s lessened time jaunts. Or, maybe, all these versions of Jerry exist in the multiverse. In an odd and in thematic terms, inexplicable turn, the novel reveals at the end that practically all the characters – whether forces of Chaos or Order – in this novel are seemingly related (perhaps a vast joke on certain Robert Heinlein time travel stories?) in a very complicated (by lots of incest) family tree. I didn’t even try to follow it. I also could not figure out the symbolism of the vulgar, annoying, opportunistic Mrs. Cornelius. ( )
1 abstimmen RandyStafford | Oct 9, 2013 |
Read about 100 pages, just... didn't care.
Spare me the 1970s men who think they're literary because they have an amoral main character and draw parallels to Jesus. ( )
  amandrake | Jun 1, 2012 |
http://nhw.livejournal.com/1029561.html

the complex tales of Jerry Cornelius, his family, his allies and his enemies. It's difficult to call it a novel, or a collection of novels; the first book perhaps comes closest to having a conventional plot, but the second and third books in particular are rather free of the contraints of linearity. You have to really let the word pictures wash over you without expecting the narrative to behave as we are used to plots behaving. There's a consistent sort of post-Empire awareness behind the scenes, which sometimes bubbles to the top: in one passage in the fourth book, various English groups are presented as if native tribes in some far-off colony. Often such experiments seem just boring and self-indulgent, but this kept my interest. ( )
  nwhyte | Apr 26, 2008 |
The Final Programme (Really weird but cool, very condensed and unbelievable ending, what was Mrs. Brunner? Not enough explanation and Jerry stepped totally out of character sometimes.)
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A Cure for Cancer (Very strange, not enough information, stupid sometimes, cool clothes, no rules to his universe.)
-
The English Assassin (unread) ( )
  ragwaine | Nov 26, 2006 |
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AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Michael MoorcockHauptautoralle Ausgabenberechnet
Fernandes, StanislawUmschlagillustrationCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
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THE REPOSSESSION OF JERRY CORNELIUS
by John Clute

Once upon a time a rather unremarkable composer and music publisher named Anton Diabelli composed a rather unremarkable waltz—simple to hum and easy to remember—and then he had an idea.
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In Cambodia, a country lying between Vietnam and Thailand on the map, between n and zero on the time chart, is the magic city of Angkor, where once the great Khmer race lived.
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The best performers had either died, decayed or fractured, leaving behind them a vocabulary of musical ideas, lyrical techniques and subject matter, styles and body languages which had never been given the opportunity to mature but had, instead, been aped by the very world of Showbiz against which they had originally revolted. And everything else was just the same—a load of oily entrepreneurs with their hair a little longer, their clothes occasionally a little easier on the eyes, their language an eager combination of professional slang and adman quasi-technical.
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Jerry Cornelius is an English assassin, physicist, rock star, and messiah to the Age of Science. Written between 1965 and 1967, this sequence of four novels relating Cornelius's adventures has been credited with inspiring dozens of writers and artists to rethink the genre of science fiction. Acclaimed British author Michael Moorcock's time-tripping antihero is one of the great achievements in modern fantastic literature. This is the first U.S. publication of one of the most influential sagas in postmodern sci-fi.

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