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Automated Alice
Automated Alice
Automated Alice
Ebook182 pages3 hours

Automated Alice

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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Jeff Noon has always been influenced by the work of Lewis Carroll, especially the two Alice books. In Automated Alice he brings Carroll's vision thoroughly up to date. Not so much a sequel to Alice in Wonderland and Through The Looking Glass, more of a trequel, the third book in a series of misadventures even wierder than your dreams.

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Jeff Noon's previous novels, Vurt and Pollen, have attracted a cult following with their psychedelic science fiction creation of the realm of "Vurt"--a region defined by illusion, dream and drug-induced fantasy. Noon has now decided to link up with an imaginative precursor by introducing Lewis Carroll's Alice as the protagonist in a new adventure that draws on Carroll's through-the-looking-glass inversions of reality, and adds a Jeff Noon menace and edginess absent from Carroll's Wonderland. Alice finds herself in 1998 Manchester when she enters an old grandfather clock, and soon becomes the prime suspect in the puzzling "Jigsaw Murders." Noon emulates Carroll's crazy wordplay throughout, and even adds his own illustrations inspired by those of John Tenniel, the famous interpreter of Alice.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherJeff Noon
Release dateAug 2, 2012
ISBN9781476077239
Automated Alice
Author

Jeff Noon

Jeff Noon is an award-winning British novelist, short story writer and playwright. He won the Arthur C Clarke Award for Vurt, the John W Campbell award for Best New Writer, a Tinniswood Award for innovation in radio drama and the Mobil prize for playwriting. He was trained in the visual arts, and was musically active on the punk scene before starting to write plays for the theatre. His previous book, The Body Library, was nominated for the Philip K Dick Award.

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Rating: 3.4974873115577885 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This is an homage to [[Lewis Carroll]] but with [[Noon]]'s added weirdness thrown in for good measure. It ties in with the former's Alice books and the latter's [Vurt] books. Alice is living with her Great Aunt Ermintrude and while awaiting a writing lesson follows a parrot inside a grandfather clock and ends up in a very strange place indeed: Manchester in 1998! (though I don't remember it being quite this strange). It appears Alice has become chief suspect in the jigsaw murders as the bodies involved just happen to have one of the missing pieces of a jigsaw she's been doing back home located on their rearranged bodies when found. With the help of a few friends, can Alice avoid the clutches of the local constabulary and of the wannabe head of the Civil Serpents, find her parrot and retrieve the missing jigsaw pieces and make it back home in time for her lesson?Puns and other word play abound and the author does a good job of keeping this within acceptable parameters for the intended audience. Only one instance should be noted to sway away from the very young and that is the description of the rearrangement of the body parts for one of the victims. Otherwise it stays fairly true to the original [[Carroll]] tone. It's a fast, action-packed story but that's to the detriment of any character and world-building and I found myself not really caring about any of the characters we meet along the way. There was however enough interest there for me to keep reading until the end to find out what transpires. Definitely not my favourite of the author's works but it hasn't put me off from picking up any of those unread ones I haven't got around to yet.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    This is pretty fun to read, but pretty light, too. There's an attempt at being Lewis Carroll-ish, which works in part, and there's a lot of puns, but it ends up being a little over-stuffed with puns, and puns alone can't keep one's interest. I read it really, really quickly, and ended up feeling like it was more quirk than content.

    The illustrations are quite fun, too -- I especially like the trumpet playing snail-man, for some reason.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    After following her aunt's pet parrot into a grandfather clock, Alice and her doll Celia find themselves in 1998, but not 1998 as it really was. With Celia transformed into the Automated Alice, she and Alice they try to find the twelve missing jigsaw pieces and make it back to 1860 in time for Alice's writing lesson.This book was a bit of a disappointment. Although the author had caught the Lewis Carroll tone, the wimsey was a bit laboured at times, and the puns over-explained.It was great that there were so many pictures and that Alice had the traditional 'head too big for her body' look, but the animaI pictures were less successful. The pathologist looked more like a weimeraner than a bloodhound, while Captain Ramshackle looked absolutely nothing like a badger.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    This was the second book I read by Jeff Noon. Whereas "Vurt" was a visceral and cerebral adventure of top quality, I read the entire contents of "Automated Alice" without a single moment of awe or excitement. Instead, I kept asking myself why I was reading the book; Alice swims from one encounter to the next with simplistic plot devices plopped down in front of her one after the other. I honestly cannot recommend this book to aficionados of Carrol's Alice, as it adds nothing. The wordplay was contrived (to be expected) and forced (the most disappointing) and occasionally clever, certainly better than I could attempt though, so 1/2 a star for a large dollop of creativity, and one more star for talent.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This book was great fun to read. It is a take-off on "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland". I was reminded of Georges Perec's novel, "Life: a users manual", with it use of puzzle pieces as one of the ways to bind the narrative together. I laughed quite a bit as I read the book: the wordplay is really quite inventive.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Oh dear, this really is a bad book. I was hoping that this recent (and unofficial) addition to the Alice books might recapture some of the magic of the originals. Unfortunately this is quite severely not the case. Simple and obvious puns are explained at length, characters are as deep as puddles and I have never been less interested in a plot in my life.Really, really awful.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Two stars feels unduly harsh, but I can't bring myself to get to three ... three means I enjoyed it well enough, but might not rush out to find more by the same author, or continue the series. Two and a half, say, but of course we aren't allowed such niceties.

    I'd just finished another Alice sequel (Alice Through the Needle's Eye) which I felt came too close to Carroll's originals, throwing into stark relief how much livelier and interesting the earlier works were. But this volume strays too far in the other direction, there's far too much plot, no beloved new characters, and it's rather bloody for an Alice book.

    I think it's very difficult to even approach the genius that is Lewis Caroll (so it's ridiculous that I've found myself inspired to do so--I'm 7,000 words into my attempt), so anyone who tries has my sympathies indeed. I think by far it's better to go the route of Catherynne Valente and her Fairyland series--it's awfully similar, but different enough that you're not expecting Carroll and Alice, and can enjoy it for its own sake.

    (Note: 5 stars = amazing, wonderful, 4 = very good book, 3 = decent read, 2 = disappointing, 1 = awful, just awful. I'm fairly good at picking for myself so end up with a lot of 4s).
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I've had this book on my shelf for at least 15 years, glad that I finally got to it. This was silly, but exactly as silly as it needed to be to keep up with the original Alice books. I liked the illustrations and the story had my wife and I laughing often. Not sure why it's labeled as "Vurt #3" it doesn't seem to have any connection to Vurt or Pollen (his first two books). There was a feather in it but that was about it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Make no mistake people either love or hate this book. Before picking this up, I would highly suggest reading some of Noon's other work ('Vurt' if nothing else) to get an idea of what type of writer Noon is. I acknowledge that this is probably not Noon's strongest work; but then again, one of the really interesting things about Noon that each one of his novels is really unique in it's structure and execution. Even though many of Noon's works take place in his Vurt/Manchester universe, each book is distintinctly different. Here is the quick and dirty of some of his works: 'Vurt' is written in the cyberpunk genre; 'Pollen' the biopunk police thriller; 'Nymphomation' is frenetic story of students vs. coroporation and moves into abstraction/surrealism ala Borges; 'Pixel Juice' is a collection of short stories with entries touching all of Noon's earlier works, 'Automated Alice' is emulation of Lewis Carrol work's and is written in a steampunk genre. The idea is that each book in the Vurt/Manchester universe is written distinctly style and genre from one another. Noon will never is not a serial novelist; indeed, every time he writes, he challenges himself in either the genre he chooses, his writing style, type layout, plot, characters, etc. People who read 'Automated Alice' are quick to criticism the characters and plot for being overly simplistic. Noon said he wished to write a 'Trequel' to Lewis Carrol's works of 'Alice in Wonderland' and 'Through the Looking Glass'. This doesn't mean that Noon just uses Lewis Carrol's characters and slaps them into his own stories. It's a genuine attempt at a Trequel: it is written in the style of Carrol and it's written like a children's story. Yes, there were deeper ideas in 'Alice in Wonderland' but that story was delivered as a children's tale. So criticizing Noon for writing 'Automated Alice' for having simple characters or plot doesn't make sense to me. Like Carrol, he wrote this as a children's story; and having a complex plot/characters was never the point of such a writing. In the spirit of Lewis Carrol, Noon writes in plenty or word play and surreal absurdities into his little story. Yes, some of the little word plays are really explicit; but again, I advise looking at this in the context of a children's tale. It was written that way intentionally. Noon chooses a neo-victorian setting for most of this book that also holds truer to the original styles of Lewis Carrol. What is really impressive is that Noon even illustrates 'Automated Alice' in the same style that Carrol illustrated 'Alice in Wonderland'. I thought this book was actually a brilliant execution as a genuine trequel to the works of Lewis Carol. Noon does an excellent job of writing this as a genuine children's adventure while still tying into his own Vurt/Manchester universe. Indeed, most of this story takes place in the Vurt and the events in this story tie back into the background history of 'Vurt', 'Pollen', 'Nymphomation', etc. Again, don't read this expecting to read another novel; it is intentionally written as a children's story. Lastly, I would read a few other books in the 'Vurt' universe before reading this one, just so that the relevance of certain events is clear in the overall history of the 'Vurt'.

    2 people found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I just love it!!! And that's not just for its use of linguistic twists and turns, but also for its wit and ingenuity and not at last for its crazyness.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I was really enjoying this book at the beginning. It’s funny! It’s a take on Alice in Wonderland! It has math puns! But the closer I got to the end, the happier I was that I was almost done. When the author (Noon--remember that; it’s important) inserted himself into the story as Mr. Zenith O’Clock, I almost walked away. But it’s a quick read, and fun, but there’s not much plot to hold the wordplay together. A good chilly afternoon read when you’re not up to something strenuous.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    As someone who has loved Lewis Carroll's Alice stories since he was a very young boy I must say that I found Jeff Noon's amusing novel, Automated Alice both clever and funny, very funny. The whimsy begins with computermites and seems to be infinite before the book is over. Poor Alice is alone, bored, and sleepy in her Great Aunt Ermintrude's house in rainy Manchester, but she is quickly swept away into another world as she follows Whippoorwill, "a green-and-yellow-plumed parrot with a bright orange beak", up and away into the mechanism of an old grandfather clock. The reader, along with Alice, never has a chance to look back. If I have any complaint with the novel, it is that like a Viennese chocolate torte it was too sweet and before the end of the book my head began to feel like it does when I have overdosed on sugar. Curiously the capriciousness speeds along at a pace which is fast and faster, to the point where I began to feel my mind spinning. It reminded me of the Red Queen's admonition to Alice : “Now, here, you see, it takes all the running you can do, to keep in the same place. If you want to get somewhere else, you must run at least twice as fast as that!” (Through the Looking Glass). It is all tremendously amusing when you find yourself laughing out loud on almost every page and you are mystified by the circumlocutions and wordplay that is positively preternatural. This is a book for all who love puns, riddles, titillating moments filled with uncommon literary references that lend the text a postmodern sheen. Some call this novel an instance of cyberpunk fiction, but I merely suggest that all who dare explore the world of speculative fiction will find this a delightful novel.

Book preview

Automated Alice - Jeff Noon

Automated Alice

Jeff Noon

Copyright 1996 by Jeff Noon

Published by Jeff Noon at Smashwords

First published in Great Britain 1996 by Doubleday – A division of Transworld Publishers Ltd.

This edition published 2012 by Jeff Noon

Cover Art Copyright 2012 by Curtis Leon Fee

Ebook design by Tim C. Taylor

All rights reserved

CONTENTS

1. THROUGH THE CLOCK’S WORKINGS

2. THE WRIGGLING OF A WORM

3. ALICE’S TWIN TWISTER

4. ADVENTURES IN A GARDEN SHED

5. THE LONG PAW OF THE LAW

6. LANGUISHING IN GAOL

7. THE STROKE OF NOON

8. ALICE LOOKS UP HERSELF

9. THE HUNTING OF THE QUARK

10. SNAKES AND LEADERS

11. DOROTHY, DOROTHY AND DOROTHY

12. ‘WHAT TIME DO YOU CALL THIS, ALICE?’

Now in my trembling days I seek

All comfort to be found

In contemplation of the past;

When we rowed aground

At Godstow on the Thames’ bank,

With my sweet Alice bound.

And there beneath a spreading elm

I told a tale of joy

To a child who smiled to hear

This older man’s employ.

But now that girl is married to

Some fine and dashing boy.

And I am near my maker’s house,

There to sup the chalice,

With one last tale to tell as time

Works my shape with malice;

Of how a child will become my

Automated Alice.

Now in these final days I seek

To find a future clime;

In which my Alice can escape

The radishes of time.

Faster, faster ticks the clock that

Turns to end this rhyme.

CHAPTER I

THROUGH THE CLOCK’S WORKINGS

Alice was beginning to feel very drowsy from having nothing to do. How strange it was that doing absolutely nothing at all could make one feel so tired. She slumped down even deeper into her armchair. Alice was visiting her Great Aunt Ermintrude’s house in Didsbury, Manchester; a frightful city in the North of England which was full of rain and smoke and noise and big factories making Heaven-knows-what. ‘I wonder how you do make Heaven-knows-what?’ thought Alice to herself. ‘Perhaps they get the recipe from somebody who’s only recently died?’

The thought of that made Alice shiver so much that she clutched at her doll ever so tightly! Her Great Aunt was a very strict old lady and she had given Alice this doll as a present with the words, ‘Alice, the doll looks just like you when you’re in a tantrum.’ Alice thought that the doll looked nothing like her at all, despite the fact that her Great Aunt had sewn it an exact (if rather smaller) replica of Alice’s favourite pinafore; the splendidly warm and red one she was currently wearing. Alice called the doll Celia, not really knowing the reason for her choice. Alice would often do things without knowing why, and this made her Great Aunt very angry indeed: ‘Alice, my dear,’ she would pronounce, ‘can’t you make sense for once?’

Alice now hugged the Celia Doll even closer to her chest, where she wrapped it in the folds of her pinafore: this was all because of the lightning that was flashing madly outside the window, and the November rain that was falling onto the glass, sounding very much like the pattering of a thousand horses’ hooves. Her Great Aunt’s house was directly opposite a large, sprawling cemetery, which Alice thought a horrible place to live.

But the very worst thing about Manchester was the fact that it was - oh dear! - always raining. ‘Oh Celia!’ Alice sighed to her doll, ‘if only Great Uncle Mortimer was here to play with us!’ Great Uncle Mortimer was a funny little man who would always have a treat tucked away for Alice; he would amuse her with jokes and magical tricks and the magnificently long words that he would teach her. Great Uncle Mortimer was, according to her Great Aunt, ‘big in the city’, whatever that could mean. ‘Well,’ said Alice to the doll, ‘he may well be big in the city, but when he gets back to his home he’s really rather small. Perhaps he’s got two sizes, one for each occasion. How splendid that must be!’ Great Uncle Mortimer would spend every night smoking on his pipe whilst adding up huge rows of numbers, and wolfing down a great plateful of the radishes that he grew for himself in the vegetable garden. Alice had never seen so many numbers before (or so many radishes). She was not awfully good at mathematics (or radish eating), and the numbers one to ten seemed quite adequate to her. After all, she only had ten fingers. Why should anybody need more than ten fingers? (Or, for that matter, more than one radish?)

These idle thoughts only made Alice realise how dreadfully bored she was. Great Aunt Ermintrude had three daughters of her own (triplets in fact) but they were all much older than Alice (and Alice always had trouble telling them apart), so they weren’t much fun at all! There was nothing to do in Manchester. The only sounds she could hear were the pitter-pattering of the rain against the window and the tick-tocking, tick-tocking of the grandfather clock in the corner of the room. The housemaid had dusted the clock this very morning and the door of it was still open. Alice could see the brass pendulum swinging back and forth, back and forth. It made her feel quite, quite sleepy, but at the same time quite, quite restless. It was at this very moment that she noticed a solitary white ant marching across the breakfast table towards a sticky dollop of Ecklethorpe’s Radish Jam; the maid had neglected to remove this in her cleaning. Alice had tried a spoonful of the radish jam (it was Uncle Mortimer’s favourite preserve) on a piece of toast that very morning but had found the taste of it too sickly sour. The ant was now running over the jigsaw puzzle that Alice had spent the whole morning trying to complete, only to find (frustratingly) that fully twelve pieces were missing from the segmented picture of London Zoo. ‘Oh, Mister Ant,’ Alice said aloud (although how she could possibly tell it was a Mister from that distance is quite beyond understanding), ‘how is it that you’ve got so much to do, whilst I, a very grown-up young girl, have got so very little to do?’

The white ant, of course, did not bother to make an answer.

Instead it was Whippoorwill who spoke to Alice. ‘Who is it that smiles at ten to two,’ he squawked, ‘and frowns at twenty past seven, every single day?’ Whippoorwill was a green-and-yellow-plumed parrot with a bright orange beak who lived in a brass cage. He was a very talkative parrot and this pleased Alice - at least she had somebody to converse with. The trouble was, Whippoorwill could only speak in riddles.

‘I don’t know,’ answered Alice, grateful for the diversion. ‘Who does smile at ten to two, and frowns at twenty past seven, every single day?’

‘I’ll tell you the answer if you open my cage.’

‘You know I daren’t do that, Whippoorwill. Great Aunt would be very angry.’

‘Then you’ll never know,’ squoked the parrot. (Squoking is how a parrot talks, exactly halfway between speaking and squawking.)

‘Oh well,’ Alice thought, ‘I suppose it won’t do very much harm to open the cage door just a little way.’ And even before the thought had finished itself, Alice had pulled herself and Celia Doll out of the armchair and made her way over to where Whippoorwill’s cage stood on an alabaster stand. ‘Now you really won’t try to escape, will you?’ said Alice to the parrot, but the parrot had no answer to give her: he clung to his perch and turned a quizzical eye towards the young girl. Seeing that quizzical eye, Alice could do nothing more than to release the tiny brass catch, and let the cage door swing open.

Oh dear! Whippoorwill immediately flew out of his cage; his bright feathers made a fan of colours and his screechy voice seemed to fill the room. ‘Whatever shall I do now?’ cried Alice, aloud. ‘My Great Aunt shall have to have words with me!’ The parrot flew all around the room and Alice tried her best to catch hold of his tail feathers, but all to no avail. Finally he flew directly into the grandfather clock’s open casing. Alice quickly ran to the clock; she slammed the door shut, trapping the poor parrot inside. The door had a window in it and Alice could see Whippoorwill making a fearful commotion trying to escape. ‘Now let that be a lesson to you, Whippoorwill,’ said Alice. She looked up at the clock’s face and saw that it was almost ten to two in the afternoon. At precisely two o’clock each day her Great Aunt would come calling for Alice to take her afternoon writing lesson; Alice could not possibly be late for that engagement. (She had not at all bothered to complete yesterday’s assignment on the correct use of the ellipsis in formal essays: the truth be known, Alice didn’t even know what an ellipsis was, except that it was made out of three little dots, just like this one is...) Despite the young girl’s predicament, the two hands of the clock seemed to put a smile on its moonlike face: it was then that Alice found the answer to Whippoorwill’s latest riddle, but when she looked through the glass window into the casing all she could see was the blur of the parrot’s wings as he flew upwards into the clock’s workings.

Whippoorwill vanished!

Alice looked here and there for the parrot, but finding only a single green-and-yellow feather floating down, she decided that she must go into the clock’s insides herself. Alice therefore opened up the door and climbed inside. It really was a very tight squeeze inside the clock, especially when the pendulum swung towards her. ‘That pendulum wants to cut my head off,’ thought Alice, and then she looked up into the workings to discover where the parrot had got to. ‘Whippoorwill?’ she cried, ‘where on the earth are you?’ But there was no trace of the parrot at all! Alice climbed aboard the pendulum as it swung past her, and then started to climb up it, which is quite a difficult task when you have a porcelain doll called Celia in your hands. But very soon she had reached the top of the pendulum and now her head was pushing against the very workings of the clock, and the tick-tocking, tick-tocking seemed very loud indeed! And that naughty Whippoorwill was still nowhere to be seen.

Just then Alice heard her Great Aunt’s stentorian voice calling over the clock’s tickings: ‘Alice! Come quickly, girl!’ the voice boomed. ‘It’s time for your lesson, dear. I do hope you’ve done your assignment correctly!’

‘Oh dear, oh dear, oh dear!’ cried Alice. ‘Whatever shall I do? Great Aunt is early for my lesson! I really must find Whippoorwill. He must be around here somewhere!’ And so Alice climbed up the pendulum even further until, with a sudden ellipsis...

...Alice vanished!

Now I don’t know if you have ever vanished, but if you have, you will know it can be quite a fearsome experience. The strangest thing was this: Alice knew that she had vanished, but, even so, she could still see herself. Imagine that, you know that you’ve vanished, but you can still see yourself! So then, how is it that you know that you’ve vanished?

But Alice was far too busy to pay much attention to these thoughts; she was presently rushing down - at an ever-increasing pace! - a long tunnel of numbers. The numbers flashed by her eyes like shooting stars in the night, and each number seemed to be larger than the last one. They started out from 1,860 (which was the number of the present year) and rapidly increased until Alice could no longer see where the count was taking her. Why, to count this far, one would need a million fingers! Ahead of her she could see Whippoorwill flying through the cascade of numbers, until what looked like a very large, and a very angry 1,998 clamped his numbersome jaws around the ever-so-naughty bird. Alice plummeted forwards (if you can plummet forwards, that is) until she felt herself being eaten up by that very same number.

Down, down, down. Through an endless tubing Alice fell. ‘Whatever shall we do, Celia?’ she said to the doll she still clutched in her fingers, and she wasn’t all that surprised when the doll answered, ‘We must keep on falling, Alice, until we reach the number’s stomach.’

‘I didn’t even know that numbers had stomachs,’ thought Alice, ‘Great Uncle Mortimer will be most astounded when I tell him this news.’ When suddenly, thump! thump! thump! down Alice came upon a heap of earth, and the fall was over.

* * *

Alice was not a bit hurt: the earth was quite soft, and she jumped up in a moment. She looked around only to find herself standing in a long corridor under the ground. The walls and

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