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Phallos Dionysus [Paperback]

Frank Palescandolo (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 1, 2000

A novel about the reappearance of the Greek god Dionysus in the modern world in the aspect and form of Priapus. Imagine the combined Wellesley and Smith College Field Hockey teams as his Baccantes. The novel, in sequences, is indebted to the play, The Baccae, by Euripides.

Laetitia Lowell, a philologist at Wellesley College, on a solo field trip to the ruins of Pompei and Herculaneum, on the slopes of Vesuvius, lost, she falls in with a procession of dreamy-eyed women dancing to the music of tambourines, flutes, drums and cithars, in barbaric dress of blue chitons, bare legged, bare breasted, and holding what appears to be a thyrsus. Bacchantes! After two thousand years! She follows what she believes to be masquerades, hoping to find her way back to Pompeii. Suddenly, she is hemmed in by the hennaed and kohl eyed women, to witness what appeared to be a rite. When the troop stops before a grotto, a venerable man who appeared to be a high priest, summons a young man from the grotto who is attired in a golden robe. His hair is Doric blonde. A magnificent Greek kouros. The young man sits on a plinth at the entrance of the grotto. The women chant choral dithyrambs out of the Bacchae of Euripides.

He opens his robe to disclose a huge flaccid male member that gradually becomes erect with the intensity of the dancing and singing -- then with a moan he ejaculates, spurting semen in a fountain spray in which the women dip kerchiefs and phallic ornaments to empower the objects as symbols of fertility.

The young man is imprisoned in the grotto. Later, she escapes with the young man, Demetrius Angeli, who is worshipped by this recondite and remote sect in time, as Dionysus in the aspect of Priapus.

For his sanity and safety, she brings him to the USA. He and his Wellesley and Smith College new world bacchantes (field hockey players) are then persecuted as a dangerous cult by a lady Attorney General. What ensues is the eternal confrontation and dynamism of Dionysan and Appollonian opposites.

* * *

Myths have no life of themselves. They wait for us to give them body. Let but one person in the world respond to their call, they offer us their vitality unimpaired.

From Albert Camus, 1946.


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Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

A passionate, lyrical recreation of the indestructible life and myth of Dionysus in modern dress. Isadora Duncan expressed herself as a baccante dancing to the dithyrambic beat of ancient music. Evoi!

Product Details

  • Paperback: 144 pages
  • Publisher: Writer's Showcase Press (October 1, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0595130429
  • ISBN-13: 978-0595130429
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,465,613 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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Average Customer Review
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5.0 out of 5 stars The fictional topicality of Phallos Dionysus, November 29, 2000
This review is from: Phallos Dionysus (Paperback)
While intending to write an appreciation of Phallos Dionysus,a novel with a serious mixture of an ethos of an ancient classical Greek culture,and wildly funny parallelisms to the modern day,I came across a quote from Tom Wolfe,the novelist that would seem to give Phallos Dionysus some topicality,albeit fictional. I quote:"Instead of striding out with a Dionysian yea-saying,as Neitzche would have put it,into the raw raucous,lust-soaked rout that throbs with amped-up octophonic tympanum all around them,our old lions had withdrawn,retreated,shielding their eyes against the light,and turned inward to such subject matter as their own little crevicei.e."the literary world" .The modern novel is dying not of obsolescence but of anoxeria.It needs food!It needs novelists with the energy and the verve to approach America like moviemakers do,with a ravenous curiosity and to go out among 270 million souls and look them in the eye"
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5.0 out of 5 stars The fictional topicality of Phallos Dionysus, November 29, 2000
This review is from: Phallos Dionysus (Paperback)
While intending to write an appreciation of Phallos Dionysus,a novel with a serious mixture of an ethos of an ancient classical Greek culture,and wildly funny parallelisms to the modern day,I came across a quote from Tom Wolfe,the novelist that would seem to give Phallos Dionysus some topicality,albeit fictional. I quote:"Instead of striding out with a Dionysian yea-saying,as Neitzche would have put it,into the raw raucous,lust-soaked rout that throbs with amped-up octophonic tympanum all around them,our old lions had withdrawn,retreated,shielding their eyes against the light,and turned inward to such subject matter as their own little crevicei.e."the literary world" .The modern novel is dying not of obsolescence but of anoxeria.It needs food!It needs novelists with the energy and the verve to approach America like moviemakers do,with a ravenous curiosity and to go out among 270 million souls and look them in the eye"
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


5.0 out of 5 stars The fictional topicality of Phallos Dionysus, November 29, 2000
This review is from: Phallos Dionysus (Paperback)
While intending to write an appreciation of Phallos Dionysus,a novel with a serious mixture of an ethos of an ancient classical Greek culture,and wildly funny parallelisms to the modern day,I came across a quote from Tom Wolfe,the novelist that would seem to give Phallos Dionysus some topicality,albeit fictional. I quote:"Instead of striding out with a Dionysian yea-saying,as Neitzche would have put it,into the raw raucous,lust-soaked rout that throbs with amped-up octophonic tympanum all around them,our old lions had withdrawn,retreated,shielding their eyes against the light,and turned inward to such subject matter as their own little crevicei.e."the literary world" .The modern novel is dying not of obsolescence but of anoxeria.It needs food!It needs novelists with the energy and the verve to approach America like moviemakers do,with a ravenous curiosity and to go out among 270 million souls and look them in the eye"
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