La Medusa is a polyphonic novel of post-conceptual consciousness. At
the heart of the whole floats Medusa, an androgynous central awareness
that anchors the novel throughout. La Medusa is at once the city of Los
Angeles, with its snaking freeways and serpentine shifts between reality
and illusion, and a brain--a modern mind that is both expansive and
penetrating in its obsessions and perceptions.
Vanessa Place's characters--a trucker and his wife, a nine-year-old
saxophonist, an ice cream vendor, a sex worker, and a corpse, among
others--are borderless selves in a borderless city, a city impossible to
contain. Her expert ventriloquism and explosive imagination anchor this
epic narrative in language that is fierce and vibrant, a penetrating a
cross-section of contemporary Los Angeles and a cross-section of the
modern mind.