
To "Cappan" due to the rough southern accent of Manzikert's That the designation "Captain" had become corrupted More than half of the first page: there's a footnote explaining The first sentence alone has three nested footnotes, taking up

Of supplementary material in the form of footnotes and glossary. To new heights - indeed, perhaps half of this slim book consists In The Early History, VanderMeer takes the art of the footnote Manzikert, perhaps the vanished patriarch himself, although VanderMeer'sįictional author, the Ambergrisian historian Duncan Shriek, arguesĮloquently against this theory in his footnotes. Other works) and Samuel Tonsure, an itinerant monk captured by Which you may be familiar as the setting of some of VanderMeer's Outset, as we read of Cappan Manzikert fleeing a fearsome rivalĪnd arriving at the site of the city he will found (a city with The Early History is intriguing and captivating from the Wouldn't be wrong in any of these assumptions. Ordinary, something most likely very funny and very good. So immediately, you know you're in for something out of the literary That challenge head on and answered it triumphantly". Unlike any that has ever been produced before, but Jeff has met Greatest challenge facing any modern author is to produce a tale Provides one of the most entertaining puffs I've encountered įurther down the back cover, Brian Stableford writes that "the You don't even need to open this fictional travel guide (1) (Necropolitan Press, $7.99, 84 pages, paperback published 1999, received 20 November 1999.) The Hoegbotton Guide to the Early History of Ambergris, by Duncan Shriek by Jeff VanderMeer Jeff VanderMeer: The Hoegbotton Guide to the Early History of Ambergris, by Duncan Shriek - an infinity plus review
