Dead Souls, Sam Riviere
Dead Souls, Sam Riviere
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Dead Souls

Author: Sam Riviere

Narrator: Thomas Judd

Unabridged: 8 hr 33 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 05/18/2021


Synopsis

For listeners of Roberto Bolaño’s Savage Detectives and Muriel Spark’s Loitering with Intent, this “sublime” and “delightfully unhinged” metaphysical mystery disguised as a picaresque romp follows one poet’s spectacular fall from grace to ask a vital question: Is everyone a plagiarist? (Nicolette Polek, author of Imaginary Museums).

A scandal has shaken the literary world. As the unnamed narrator of Dead Souls discovers at a cultural festival in central London, the offender is Solomon Wiese, a poet accused of plagiarism. Later that same evening, at a bar near Waterloo Bridge, our narrator encounters the poet in person, and listens to the story of Wiese’s rise and fall, a story that takes the entire night—and the remainder of the novel—to tell.

Wiese reveals his unconventional views on poetry, childhood encounters with “nothingness,” a conspiracy involving the manipulation of documents in the public domain, an identity crisis, a retreat to the country, a meeting with an ex-serviceman with an unexpected offer, the death of an old poet, a love affair with a woman carrying a signpost, an entanglement with a secretive poetry cult, and plans for a triumphant return to the capital, through the theft of poems, illegal war profits, and faked social media accounts—plans in which our narrator discovers he is obscurely implicated.

Dead Souls is a metaphysical mystery brilliantly encased in a picaresque romp, a novel that asks a vital question for anyone who makes or engages with art: Is everyone a plagiarist?

Reviews

Goodreads review by Ron

“Dead Souls,” by the English writer Sam Riviere, is hard to stop reading because it’s written as a single paragraph almost 300 pages long. Never in my life have I so missed the little periodic indentations of ordinary prose. It felt like wandering around the mall for six days looking for a place to......more

Goodreads review by Paul

Dead Souls is the Gogolian title of the debut novel from Norfolk-born poet Sam Riviere. It is hard not to comment, in common with a number of reviews ([URL not allowed]) that the novel is best described as a Roberto Bolano plot written in the style of Thomas Bernhard, Savage D......more

Goodreads review by Liz

Dead Souls is the very definition of a literary read if you take literary within the popular literary v genre fiction argument- this novel has no stopping points, no chapters and sometimes endless seeming sentences. It stands out because of these things even though it is not unique and in the end, o......more

Goodreads review by Paul

Once I got into it I really enjoyed this satire on the arts establishment positing an alternative London where poets rule the (arts) roost. Riviere has a good old dig at the mainstream government funded arts organisations (I'm guessing organisations such as the Arts Council, Barbican and South Bank......more

Goodreads review by Tina

DEAD SOULS by Sam Riviere is an interesting and intricate novel. It’s about a poet who is disgraced when it’s found out his work has been plagiarized. This book is described as a metaphysical mystery whatever that is. I didn’t find there to be much mystery. I can appreciate the writing but I struggl......more