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Madden, David 1933–: Critical Essay by Webster Schott

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About 2 pages (479 words)
David Madden Summary

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Among other themes, Pleasure-Dome ponders [the] "surrender" of Lucius Hutchfield to the Coleridge syndrome, intoxication by imagination. Lucius is the same young lover of illusion who worked in the movie house that gave David Madden's novel Bijou (1974) its title. Since then he may have expanded his romantic references beyond films and Thomas Wolfe, but he is still hooked on the narcotic of fantasy and its intellectual superior, art.

As he wanders over the ruins of Zara's life and begins fabricating Jesse James stories to amaze a local motorcycle cowboy, Lucius locates the center of Madden's concern in writing a novel that often seems to be about the act of writing a novel….

This is a free excerpt of 112 words. There are 479 words (approx. 2 pages at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.

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Madden, David 1933–: Critical Essay by Webster Schott from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.

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