5/9/2023 0 Comments The illuminatus trilogy books![]() ![]() I can tell you want happened in my 100 pages (not much), but if you like the idea of interconnected conspiracy, I recommend Foucault's Pendulum, which has many qualities to recommend. If anyone is reading this, feel free to read someone else's blurb to find out what this story is about, because I don't know. Well, I read one-eighth (yes, it's 800 pages) and there was no reward in sight, and in fact I found myself staying up later at night simply to avoid having to read this book. The trilogy comprises three parts which contain five books and appendices: The Eye in the Pyramid (first two books), The Golden Apple (third and part of fourth book), Leviathan (part of fourth and all of fifth book, and the appendices). You also risk alienating them before the payoff arrives. Look, you can make all kinds of statements about the rigidity of the novel's form, but random switching between speakers/POV without even the slightest convention to clue your reader in is risky, so there needs to be some payoff. The Illuminatus Trilogy is a series of three novels written by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson first published in 1975. ![]() Perhaps there will be at some point, and perhaps I'll return to this in the future, but for now, I'm done. One hundred pages into this and I've realized, there isn't. ![]() I'm always in the mood for conspiracy theory, and odd-ball sensibilities are fine as long as there's a point. Robert Anton Wilson's (and that other guy's) trilogy is one of those books that hovered around the edges of my awareness as a cult novel(s), and that alone was enough to prompt me to read it. This just isn't going to happen, not now. ![]()
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