This is not for you. – prologue, House of Leaves
Mark Danielewski’s Y2K-era House of Leaves is the cult horror equivalent to that other literary apotheosis of Generation X, Infinite Jest. Capitalizing on the era’s early internet culture and fascination with “found footage” tropes, House of Leaves is most famous for its labyrinthine structure. Johnny Truant, a down-and-out tattoo parlor worker bee in LA (does it get more Gen X? Yes, it does. He sojourns in Seattle.), is called over frantically at 3am to the apartment of his best friend “Lude.” A la Toni Morrison, person-names are very important here. Lude’s upstairs neighbor – a mysterious blind, elderly man named Zampanò – has passed away, and Lude is compelled to enter his apartment. Once inside the apartment and upon smelling a strong odor – not bad, just “sort of human” – Johnny now falls under the spell of compulsion as he discovers in a corner a massive stack of papers and detritus that he removes from the apartment. The papers are the beginnings of a scholarly manuscript describing and critiquing a massively influential and important documentary-turned-horror film, The Navidson Record. This film, created by the famous photographer Will Navidson of National Geographic fame, took the world by storm, showing as it does an inexplicable horror such that it is unclear if the footage is real or a hoax. Navidson’s reputation strongly argues against a fake. Entire schools of thought have developed around the meaning of The Navidson Record, and Zapanò’s is to be the definitive compendium. The manuscript is thoroughly footnoted, with an extensive bibliography, with commentary by major film and literary critics, with references to university film studies centered on the documentary. Johnny cannot stop arranging the manuscript into book form – Rime of the Ancient Mariner meets The Evil Dead. And he frequently adds his own footnotes and commentary to the manuscript. So the “structure” of House of Leaves is such that Johnny is compiling Zampanò’s manuscript of Navidson’s documentary-horror film. And there are mysterious, omniscient “editors” who with mercifully rare interpolation add even further comment. However, Johnny soon discovers that there is no evidence such a film, a person named Navidson, or any of the references or commentaries have ever existed. Why would Zampanò do this? How did he do this? Regardless, Johnny himself cannot stop – he must continue the manuscript, and his continuing of something which is obviously the product of a disturbed mind leads to his own insanity.
Whatever the merits of the book, I do find it interesting to consider HoL a generation later, in which strangers on the internet routinely are similarly compelled to extensively comment and compile (screenshots are the new bibliographies) upon other strangers’ writings about things that quite possibly have never existed. And occasionally these people go insane. House of Leaves, if nothing else, inchoately prophesied in its doomed house on “Ash Tree Lane” in which the inside is larger – and infinitely so – than the outside of the house, the phenomena of doom scrolling and trolling and that the Panopticon ever expands as it ever closes in.