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Jacques Roubaud

    December 5, 1932

    Jacques Roubaud is a French poet and mathematician whose work often explores the intersection of art and science. A member of the Oulipo group, his writing is characterized by a profound self-consciousness of the act of creation, where formal constraints often appear through their very suppression. Roubaud's prose, ranging from playful narratives to profound meditations on existence, investigates writing as an affirmation of worth and being.

    La bibliothèque de Warburg
    Fünfundfünfzigtausendfünfhundertfünfundfünfzig Bälle
    Die Entführung der schönen Hortense
    Die schöne Hortense
    Princess Hoppy, Or, the Tale of Labrador
    A Short Treatise Inviting the Reader to Discover the Subtle Art of Go
    • 1993

      A postmodern fairy tale might best describe Jacques Roubaud's delightful book The Princess Hoppy or, The Tale of Labrador. How else to describe a novel that reads like an Arthurian romance as rewritten by Lewis Carroll, with enough math puzzles to keep the game reader busy with a calculator for months? The tale concerns a princess, her faithful dog (who happens to be a wiz at math), four royal uncles always plotting, four royal aunts always potting, a lovesick hedgehog named Bartleby, two camels named North Dakota and South Dakota, four ducks who double as boats (thus called doats), and an amphibious blue whale named Barbara--to name only a few. (Even the Sun has a speaking role.) There are dramatic abductions, daring rescues, passages in hitherto untranscribed languages (Dog, Grasshopper, Duck), tales of unrequited love, allegorical interludes, poems, a playlet, and much more. (But no suspenders, the author promises.) Finally, there are 79 questions for readers of the novel, to see how closely they've been paying attention--for ultimately The Princess Hoppy is a giddy inquiry into how we read literary works. It is both an old-fashioned tale and an ultramodern hypertext, the oldest and the latest thing in fiction.

      Princess Hoppy, Or, the Tale of Labrador