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I Am Radar

Page 69

by Reif Larsen


  All images not listed here are in the public domain or courtesy of the author.

  Page 1: © National Library of the Netherlands

  Page 137: Courtesy of Discus Media Group

  Pages 145, 449, 598: “Franklin Island map,” adapted from Atlas of Remote Islands by Judith Schalansky, translated by Christine Lo, © 2009 by mareverlag. Translation © 2010 by Christine Lo. Used by permission of Penguin Books, a member of Penguin Group (USA) LLC.

  Page 173: Photo by Fred Kratochwil, Stadtarchiv (Wuppertal)

  Page 247: Courtesy of Roger M. Richards

  Page 249: Courtesy of Argonne National Laboratory

  Page 286: © Western Electric, Courtesy of Marc Francisco

  Page 289: © Robert Stevens

  Page 475: © CERN

  Page 481: From the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum, Cambodia

  Page 491: © Denis Yarbrough

  Page 596, 597 top: Courtesy of Cappelen Dam AS

  Page 620: Adapted from The Selected Works of T. S. Spivet: A Novel by Reif Larsen, copyright © 2009 by Penguin Press. Used by permission of Penguin Press, a member of Penguin Group (USA) LLC.

  1 “Jesse Jackson, Mayor Abe Beame,” The Alex Bennett Show, WPLJ, April 22, 1975. Radio broadcast.

  2 “Robot Djecak,” Vijesti iz kulture, RTV Sarajevo, March 2, 1987. Television broadcast.

  3 M. Bozovic, “Ja nisam takav sin oca,” Naša Borba, April 4, 1993, 5.

  4 Prosecutor v. Stanislav Galić, appeals judgment, International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, IT-98-29-A, November 30, 2006.

  5 “So unlikely as to approach an impossibility,” writes Røed-Larsen of this book’s discovery, in Spesielle Partikler (597).

  6 The existence and persistence of such a pad is briefly disputed by Røed-Larsen (598).

  7 Røed-Larsen takes issue with Jean-Baptiste’s involvement (601), citing Catherine Hodeir and Michel Pierre, L’Exposition Coloniale (1991); Sylvie Pala, Documents: Exposition Coloniale Internationale (1981); and Sylviane Leprun, Le Théâtre des colonies (1986) as providing no mention of a rubber plantation at the exposition’s Indochina Pavilion.

  8 Røed-Larsen claims they were actually married in the spring of 1934, citing an attestation de marriage he tracked down in an archive at the Halte-Garderie Municipale (603).

  9 In one of his more passionate dissents, Røed-Larsen claims there is no evidence that such a conference ever took place in Copenhagen during the winter of 1937, pointing to, among other things, the fact that Niels Bohr was in the middle of a world tour at this point, engaged with visiting the USA, Japan, China, and the USSR. “Unless, of course,” Røed-Larsen writes facetiously, “Tofte-Jebsen is writing of another Bohr, another Copenhagen, a parallel Bohr in a parallel Copenhagen . . . in which case I can offer no comment” (604).

  10 “Another fabrication,” writes Røed-Larsen. “There is no record in the Japanese Imperial Army Hall of Records (, Tokyo) of a Lieutenant Sakutaro Matsuo stationed in French Indochina during the years 1940–1945. There is a Warrant Officer R. Matsuoka and a Captain T. Matsumoto, but I must assume that neither of these are the man in question, unless of course Tofte-Jebsen can provide evidence to the contrary” (610).

  11 The Phumi Hang Savat attack is challenged by Røed-Larsen, who points to the absence of any record or testimony of such an event. “Historical fiction disgusts me,” he writes. “No—all fiction, no matter its time or place, sends me into an existential tailspin. Why invent? Why invent when so much of the truth—the real truth—remains unknown?” (618)

  12 Røed-Larsen notes that such a document, if it indeed ever existed, was never recovered.

  13 Amazingly, both Tofte-Jebsen and Røed-Larsen agree on the existence of such a chart.

  14 This was rebutted, tongue in cheek, by Per Røed-Larsen in his epistemological essay “Levetiden på sannheten” (1978): “Time and story have little bearing on truth; truth must be, by definition, a confluence of reality and reality alone” (24).

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