amphibian, on 16 March 2015 - 07:30 PM, said:
Rictus, on 16 March 2015 - 06:52 PM, said:
The best entry point to Gene Wolfe is The Knight, followed by The Wizard.
What he does in most of his books is to use the "writing in a diary" approach by the hero of the story - but most times, there's sub-text and possible evasions/cover-ups of something sneaky going on as well.
In the New Sun books, Wolfe particularly plays around with Severian's need to romanticize Thecla, embiggen himself as an honest person and throws in a bit of Shakespeare in an actual play being thrown that has all kinds of allusions to stuff in our real world and Severian's world.
In The Knight and The Wizard, the hero, Sir Able of the High Heart, is much more straightforwards and easy to glom onto as a reader. It's also a more straightforwards reinvention of Arthurian/Northern European legends and mythology.
Yes, I suspected his love affairs were something major, seeing how the man falls in love at the drop of a hat. I'm not giving up, of course, I'm merely frustrated because of my general cluelessness. Severian and the rest of the actors reached some giant wall -- that's where I'm at, so maybe I have yet to reach some critical juncture where some things become clear, though I'm not holding my breath.