"Last Kingdom is a set of books that . . . is neither philosophical
argumentation nor little disparate, scholarly essays, nor novelistic
narrative; gradually, for me, all genres have fallen away."
So writes Pascal Quignard of his monumental book series, Last Kingdom.
In the latest volume, The Fount of Time, he focuses on the
paradoxically immediate presence in our lives of the deepest, most
distant past. He explores this subject through a multitude of mediums:
fragments of autobiography; curious folktales; literary snippets;
historical anecdotes both classical and modern; ruminations on biology,
archaeology, and linguistics. Using all of these forms, he confronts
dimensions of human experience which, though customarily conveyed in
legend, myth, and dreams, run somehow beneath the everyday world and yet
are part of our most tangible reality.
To enter Quignard's horizonless time-space is to embrace a rich vision
in which the totality of human history and culture is placed
disconcertingly on a single footing. In The Fount of Time we are able
to glimpse--whether through obscure cultural detail or unusual
anecdote--"another world beneath the world."