LabforCulture

Illya Szilak


still from the animation Reconstructing Mayakovsky
still from the animation Reconstructing Mayakovsky

About the Novel:

Set in the future, Reconstructing Mayakovsky revisits the past to make sense of our chaotic present. Inspired by Vladimir Mayakovsky, the Russian Futurist poet who killed himself in 1930 at the age of thirty-six, the novel imagines a world where uncertainty and tragedy have finally been eliminated through technology. Reconstructing Mayakovsky takes a radical approach to historical fiction. While extensively researched and historically accurate, it tells the story of Mayakovsky’s life in the context of our present-day fears and fantasies about the future.

Caroline Leavitt, author of Girls in Trouble and Come Back to Me, offers this assessment: “The past and the future intersect in a wild ride of a novel that’s part Thomas Pynchon, part Steve Erickson, and totally original. Szilak’s dazzling book has revolution at its dark heart, and genius in its soul. She’s created a world where all realities just might be virtual and the hunger for change or for love can’t be denied. Smart, complex, provocative, moving and addictive.”

About the Site:
Like the novel, the site uses "found" objects (sound, image, text) and combines elements of science fiction, poetry, the historical novel and the detective story to create a new literary form.

"Illya uses a variety of medias and methods, including manifestos, texts, animations, podcasts, music, and data visualisations. The result is a engrossing multilayered digital sci-fi/fantasy/biographical ‘novel’, well worthy of the artist who inspired it." Chris Joseph, UK-based digital writer, co-author Inanimate Alice


 
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