William S. Buroughs’s novella,
Ghost of a Chance, is his last published fictional work of length. Published in 1991, the novella represents Burroughs’s clearest articulation of ecological concerns alongside utopian political/social theories he had developed in his work at least since
The Wild Boys(1971). He sums up the overall theme of the novella, writing:
A rift is built into the human organism, the rift or cleft between the two hemispheres, so any attempt at synthesis must remain unrealizable in human terms. I draw a parallel between this rift separating the two sides of the human body and the rift that divided Madagascar from the mainland of Africa. One side of the rift drifted into enchanted timeless innocence. The other moved inexorably toward language, time, tool use, weapon
960 words
Citation: Bolton, Michael Sean. "Ghost of a Chance". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 09 October 2011 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=4973, accessed 21 November 2024.]