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Excerpt:
...Relatively late in the study of Darger's room and
its chaotically disorganized contents, it was discovered
that he had become involved with the writing of a sequel
to In the Realms of the Unreal. The discovery was hindered
for a very long time because the pile of loose pages
and school notebooks containing the later work lacked
a title page. Only after careful study of the fifteen
volumes of the handwritten manuscript did it become
evident that we were dealing with a distinct creation,
a story which describes the further adventures of the
Vivian girls, not in the Realms of the Unreal, but in
Chicago. This separate work, consisting of over 8,000
pages, was therefore provided with a temporary title
of its own, Further Adventures in Chicago: Crazy House.
Darger, having brought The Realms to a close, felt unable
to bring his long and intense involvement with the Vivian
girls and their friends to an end. It is not known when
he finished work on The Realms. (1) What is certain
is that the composition of the sequel began in 1939.
(2)
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The story is set in the Chicago of Henry's boyhood,
in the area around Adams Street and Halsted where he
lived as a child with his father. Strangely, it opens
in September 1911, precisely the same year in which
events get underway in The Realms of the Unreal. The
Vivian girls, still Abbieannian princesses, are studying
in Chicago at Henry's former elementary school. They
are attending services at St. Patrick's church, and
live in a flat at 201 Halsted, just around the corner
from Henry's former home. Oddly, they are living in
poverty, and are being extremely badly treated. Their
status as saintly exemplars of Catholic morality is,
if anything, enhanced in this story, while the problems
facing them involve new extremes of human and demonic
immorality. So radical is this book, in its emphasis
on violence and perverse sexuality, that it presents
us with a serious problem.
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