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.