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Hogg » (1)

Book cover image of Hogg by Samuel R. Delany

Authors: Samuel R. Delany
ISBN-13: 9781573661195, ISBN-10: 1573661198
Format: Paperback
Publisher: University of Alabama Press
Date Published: May 2004
Edition: 1

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Author Biography: Samuel R. Delany

Samuel R. Delany is one of the most celebrated writers of speculative fiction and is also a noted author of scripts, a director, and the editor of two short films. His novel Babel-17 (Vintage, 2002) won the Science Fiction Writers of America Award in 1966 and he has also won four Nebula Awards and one Hugo Award. His other books include The Bridge of Lost Desire (Arbor House, 1987), Dhalgren (University Press of New England, 1996), Atlantis: Three Tales (Wesleyan University Press, 1995), The Star Pits (Tor Books, 1989), and Equinox (Masquerade, 1994). He currently teaches Queer Studies at Temple University.

Book Synopsis


One of America's most famous 'unpublishable' novels, Hogg explores America's culture of sexual violence and degneration. Delany explores his disturbing protagonist Hogg on his own turf

Publishers Weekly

Hugo-and Nebula Award-winner Delany-whose early books were fascinating but whose recent efforts have grown increasingly obtuse-has been trying to get this pornographic novel published since 1973. The main narrator here is an 11-year-old boy who joins up with a raping, murdering pederast named Hogg. Coprophiliac Hogg violates women for pay. He enlists the help of other pedophiliac murdering rapists-Nigg, Dago and Denny-and the group sets off to perform acts of hideous violence. After the attacks, a biker friend of Hogg's sells the boy into sexual slavery to dockyard slum resident Big Sambo, who keeps his 12-year-old daughter for prostitution and his own perversions. The traumatized little girl is gang-raped by Hogg's crew as well. Meanwhile, teenaged Denny goes on an insane mutilating and mass-murder spree, eludes the police and finally returns to Hogg and the hopelessly confused narrator, who has been ``rescued'' after Hogg murders Big Sambo. Gang-rape attacks and criminal sex orgies are detailed at excruciating length, with photographic realism. This potent emetic is all the more disturbing for want of modulators of honest outrage. In other works, Delany has examined the role of the criminal within society; with Hogg, he apparently was content merely to inhabit the criminal mind without exploring it. (Mar.)

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