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Rosemary has been unusually kind since the hallucination in the Bistro Garden. Edna's lines are now much longer that 'you mean dot dot question mark.' Rosemary has made a lot of interesting variations like 'For Heaven's sake, Silas, you can't mean that dot dot question mark.'


Duluth is a novel written by Gore Vidal. Released in 1983, it tells of the titular town and the various ways media intersects with it.

Characters[]

  • Lieutenant Darlene Ecks - a lieutenant in Duluth
  • Rosemary Klein Kantor - the author of Rogue Duke

rest to be added

Publisher's summary[]

Duluth is a savage satire of the American way of life. Mocking everything imaginable, from motherhood to television, Vidal's critique finds in the city of Duluth and its inhabitants a powerful symbol that resonates with any American city.

In it, two women who have just died in a car trapped by the snow are resurrected to join a popular television series and a romance novel. And while they continue communicating with the living, Lieutenant Darlene Ecks terrorizes the undocumented immigrants living in the neighborhoods, the mayor disappears inside a sticky spaceship, and Betty Grable's biographers enthusiastically investigate her mysterious death. (note: Google Translated from Spanish)

Sources[]

  • Wikipedia
  • Goodreads
           Works of Gore Vidal

Early novels (1940s-1950s)
Williwaw, In a Yellow Wood, The City and the Pillar, The Season of Comfort, A Search for the King, Dark Green, Bright Red, A Star's Progress, The Judgment of Paris, Thieves Fall Out, Messiah
Peter Cutler Sargent II novels
Death in the Fifth Position, Death Before Bedtime, Death Likes It Hot
Middle novels (1960s-1980s)
Julian, Myra Breckinridge, Two Sisters, Myron, Kalki, Creation, Duluth
Narratives of Empire
Washington, D.C., Burr, 1876, Lincoln, Empire, Hollywood, The Golden Age
Later novels (1990s)
Live From Golgotha, The Smithsonian Institution