The Fifty Year Sword | |
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Author(s) | Mark Z. Danielewski |
Original title | Het Vijftig Jaars Zwaard |
Cover artist | Peter van Sambeek |
Country | Netherlands |
Language | Dutch, English |
Genre(s) | Short stories |
Publisher | De Bezige Bij |
Publication date | 31 October 2005 |
Media type | Print (Hardback) |
Pages | 100 |
ISBN | ISBN 90-234-1856-5 (orig. Dutch) & ISBN 90-234-1877-8 (Eng. trans.) |
OCLC Number | 71707811 |
Preceded by | The Whalestoe Letters |
Followed by | Only Revolutions |
The Fifty Year Sword is a novella written by Mark Z. Danielewski. Only 1,000 first edition English books were released. 51 of those copies are signed in marker with a "Z" (varying in color and number to coincide with the 5 colored quotation marks that signify different speakers in the text), while the first copy is signed "Mark Danielewski" in ink. A second English edition of 1,000 was released in October 2006. In a recent interview, Danielewski announced that there are currently plans for a future US printing.
The Fifty Year Sword uses strange formatting and colors throughout the book, much like Danielewski's previous work, House of Leaves. However, unlike House of Leaves which only contained three colors (blue, red, and purple), The Fifty Year Sword contains 5 colors which are used on quotation marks. The colors indicate which of 5 characters is speaking at the moment, according to the introduction of the book.
Contents |
The Fifty Year Sword is essentially a mature-audience ghost story, in the disguised form of a children's book. The events of the book take place at a woman's 50th birthday party in an orphan's foster home, told from the point of view of Chintana, a kind yet sullen seamstress who is struggling with the recent divorce from her husband over an affair, the mistress of which is ironically the birthday girl whose party Chintana is attending. A storyteller is invited by a social worker to entertain the orphans. He brings with him a long, black box. The storyteller entertains the orphans by explaining his adventures of obtaining the contents of the box: His Fifty Year Sword, a weapon that never fails to cut but shows no wound until the victim's 50th year of life. He recants a suspenseful, epic journey through mystical rocky trails and soundless forests, bent on finding an otherworldly swordsmith to satisfy a dark, never explained personal grudge. He then opens the box, revealing a seemingly bladeless sword, and he waves it in the air at the candles. Just then, the mistress and Birthday Girl, who has barged in toward the end of the story, gets annoyed at the storyteller and tells the children the whole thing is a bunch of hogwash, and sets out to prove it. She takes the hilt of the sword, and slashes it around at herself to disprove the man's story, much to the horror of the children and the bemusement of the shadowy storyteller. The suspense grabs the reader even more as the storyteller finishes and Chintana and the other guests go outside so the Birthday Girl can toast herself as her 50th year of life begins at the stroke of midnight.
On Halloween 2010, Danielewski conducted two sold-out performances of The Fifty Year Sword at the REDCAT theater inside Walt Disney Concert Hall. The evening featured five voices and large-scale shadows by shadowcaster Christine Marie. [1] The following year, REDCAT announced the show's return on Halloween 2011.[2]
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