The Mouse Trap

Fiction & Literature, Literary
Cover of the book The Mouse Trap by Vincent Gray, Vincent Gray
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Author: Vincent Gray ISBN: 9781370573622
Publisher: Vincent Gray Publication: January 5, 2017
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Vincent Gray
ISBN: 9781370573622
Publisher: Vincent Gray
Publication: January 5, 2017
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

While the narrator’s story centres on a young teenage Lolita. The story also includes school yard narratives and school boy folk wisdom regarding strategy, tactics, manoeuvres, persuasion and the overall methodology for the guaranteed, successful and fool-proof gaining of access to physical intimacy with girls.The Mouse Trap involved the use of erotic romantic fiction to engage in metaphysical, political and philosophical reflectons. In some respect it is a response to Herbert Marcuse's Eros and Civilization and Reich's project on sexuality. It explores ideas and action related to nihilism and anarchism.The Mouse Trap was meant to be a dystopian novel, possibly something like Anthony Burgess' A Clockwork Orange. However it did not quite turn out that way. However the idea of Nihilism especially as expressed in erotic teenage relationships became a theme I thought worthwhile exploring. It is my first stab at the dystopian novel. Did boys with characters like Charles, Gavin and Thomas actually exist? Did girls with characters like Paula and Vera actual exist? Maybe they did!
The Mouse Traps draws on memories of the views, opinions, values/morality and behavior of teenage boys and girls when I was in high school. Is the universe causally closed. Is the Universe like a mouse trap. That is the fundamental question of this highly charged Novella which creates the illusion that the narrative is skating on the thin ice of common decency.In 'The Mouse Trap' the echoes of a nascent postmodernism begins to resonate in the emerging vision of teenage realities which begin to take shape on the desolate wastelands of the East Rand gold fields in South Africa. A nihilism inspired by a messianic vision of Naturalism and Physicalism mixed in with the influences of Lindsay Anderson’s movie called ‘IF…..’ and the book ‘A Clockwork Orange’ by Anthony Burgess play a significant role in shaping the perceptions of teenage school boys who in a spirit of anarchist rebellion embark on erotic adventures in which the parable of the charioteer of the soul in Plato’s ‘Phaedrus’ finally finds voice once more after the passing of millennia.

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While the narrator’s story centres on a young teenage Lolita. The story also includes school yard narratives and school boy folk wisdom regarding strategy, tactics, manoeuvres, persuasion and the overall methodology for the guaranteed, successful and fool-proof gaining of access to physical intimacy with girls.The Mouse Trap involved the use of erotic romantic fiction to engage in metaphysical, political and philosophical reflectons. In some respect it is a response to Herbert Marcuse's Eros and Civilization and Reich's project on sexuality. It explores ideas and action related to nihilism and anarchism.The Mouse Trap was meant to be a dystopian novel, possibly something like Anthony Burgess' A Clockwork Orange. However it did not quite turn out that way. However the idea of Nihilism especially as expressed in erotic teenage relationships became a theme I thought worthwhile exploring. It is my first stab at the dystopian novel. Did boys with characters like Charles, Gavin and Thomas actually exist? Did girls with characters like Paula and Vera actual exist? Maybe they did!
The Mouse Traps draws on memories of the views, opinions, values/morality and behavior of teenage boys and girls when I was in high school. Is the universe causally closed. Is the Universe like a mouse trap. That is the fundamental question of this highly charged Novella which creates the illusion that the narrative is skating on the thin ice of common decency.In 'The Mouse Trap' the echoes of a nascent postmodernism begins to resonate in the emerging vision of teenage realities which begin to take shape on the desolate wastelands of the East Rand gold fields in South Africa. A nihilism inspired by a messianic vision of Naturalism and Physicalism mixed in with the influences of Lindsay Anderson’s movie called ‘IF…..’ and the book ‘A Clockwork Orange’ by Anthony Burgess play a significant role in shaping the perceptions of teenage school boys who in a spirit of anarchist rebellion embark on erotic adventures in which the parable of the charioteer of the soul in Plato’s ‘Phaedrus’ finally finds voice once more after the passing of millennia.

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