The Dalkey Archive
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- For the publishing house, see Dalkey Archive Press.
The Dalkey Archive is a novel by the Irish writer Flann O'Brien. It is his fifth and final novel, published in 1964, two years before his death. It features a mad scientist, De Selby, who tries to destroy the world by sucking out all the air. He has also many strange inventions. He exploits the theory of relativity and invents a kind of time traveling machine, which he uses to age his whiskey; creating brews that have been aged for many decades in just a few hours. Saint Augustine and James Joyce both have speaking parts in the novel. James Joyce, after forging his own obituary to escape being drafted to fight in the Second World War, was serving pints in a small pub. Saint Augustine, on the other hand, appeared in a magical underwater cave and held a conversation with the main character. The mad scientist De Selby leads the main character to the cave, in which one may call upon anyone who has ever lived from the past and present and converse with them.
Many prominent elements of the book, particularly De Selby himself, the eccentric policemen, and the atomic theory of the bicycle, were taken from O'Brien's much earlier novel The Third Policeman, because he had not been able to find a publisher for it. That novel was published posthumously, and is generally regarded as greatly superior.