The First Eric Sanderson Letters
The Raw Shark Texts is broken into four distinct sections, each marked by a quotation. There are 36 chapters in the novel broken into the following sections:
The quotation from section One comes from Jorge Luis Borges and his text Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius. Borges' short story was first published in Sur magazine in Argentina in 1940. The first English translation appeared in 1961. The story is one part speculative fiction, one part futuristic detective story and one part parable. Even more relevant to The Raw Shark Texts itself, is the sentence that follows the in-book quotation: "In his lifetime, he suffered from unreality, as do so many Englishmen; once dead, he is not even the ghost he was then."
The second section starts off with a quotation from American short story writer and poet Raymond Carver. From "At Night the Salmon Move," which is from a book of poetry of the same name, was published in 1976. That same year, Carver was hospitalized for acute alcoholism; and while growing up his father was an active hunter and fisherman, often regaling the author with his tales. Reference to the fish aside, another interesting fact to note is that in Carver's last book of poetry before he died, there was a "coda" entitled "Late Fragment."
Haruki Murakami lends his words from The Wind Up Bird Chronicles for the quotation that opens section Three. First published in 1997, one of the central characters in the novel is a man whose cat disappears, and one of the book's most important themes revolves around dreams and actions within dreamlike states.
The fourth and final section opens with a quote from Italo Calvino's Six Memos for the Next Millennium. The book is the published format of a series of six lectures the author gave at Harvard University. Published in 1999, Calvino had actually passed away before completing the sixth and final lecture even though the book reflects his original title selection. The lectures themselves discuss the work of many different writers, but as New York Times columnist Margo Jefferson explains, Calvino explains that "literature [becomes] a way to escape the ego and give speech not only to other humans 'but to the bird perching on the edge of the gutter, to the tree in spring and the tree in fall, to stone, to cement, to plastic...'."
Note: There is a fifth and final quotation in the book from Paul Auster's The Invention of Solitude. The book begins with this one simple line: "One day there is life...and then, suddenly, it happens there is death." Primarily a meditation on the death of Auster's own father, this is the book that the First Eric Sanderson reads while on vacation in Greece.
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