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Stet (novel)

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Stet, by James Chapman
(Cover painting by Michael Hafftka) Stet.jpg
Stet, by James Chapman
(Cover painting by Michael Hafftka)

Stet is a novel by the American author James Chapman, published by Fugue State Press in 2006. [1]

Contents

Plot summary

Stet tells the life story of a visionary Soviet filmmaker named Stet who lives through Stalin's repressions, manages to direct his first feature film, but ends up in a prison camp for various offenses against the bureaucracy.

The novel is narrated in a "Russian" voice, by an ostensible third-person narrator who is nevertheless full of opinions and bitter aphorisms. Despite his third-person status, the narrator seems to be a major character in the book.

The tone of the book is black humor, and often entirely pessimistic, as it delineates the difficulties of living as an artist who does not accept or worry about the judgments of his surrounding world. Yet the character of the filmmaker Stet, to whom aesthetic ecstasy remains available throughout his trials, seems to give the reader an alternative to the pessimism of the narrator.

Themes

References

  1. 1 2 Gerdes, Eckhard (Spring 2007). "James Chapman. Stet". The Review of Contemporary Fiction . 27 (1): 163.
  2. Elkind, Daniel (February 18, 2021). "On One of the Great Unsung War Novels of the Last 30 Years". Literary Hub . Retrieved December 18, 2024.
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