I find the following passage particularly evocative. Blomkvist travels north by train:
"After Uppsala came the string of small industrial towns along the Norrland coast. Hedestad was one of the smaller ones, a little more than an hour north of Gavle."
-Stieg Larsson, The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo (London, 2008), p. 68.
Uppsala, Norrland and Gavle are real. Hedestad is not. We could travel just over an hour beyond Gavle and know that we were in the place where Hedestad is supposed to be.
How might we generate the experience of arriving in Hedestad?
Virtual reality;
"emulation," i.e., conscious AI simulation, as in Poul Anderson's Genesis;
parallel universes where what is fictional on one Earth is real in another, like the Shakespearean timeline in Anderson's Midsummer Tempest.
But maybe all such speculations are what we call "going too far"? In the normal way of things, we simply enjoy reading about and imagining Hedestad. We know what Blomkvist experiences when he is there.
3 comments:
Kaor, Paul!
We even know Sherlock Holmes' address: 22B Baker Street!
I might have included Lord Peter Wimsey among those fictional characters who lived in London. I really should reread some of Sayers' Wimsey mysteries.
Ad astra! Sean
And Faulkner created a fictitious county in Mississippi -- Yoknapatawpha County
Kaor, Mr. Stirling!
I remember that, despite not having read any of Faulkner's books.
Ad astra! Sean
Post a Comment