Cleverness is not wisdom. 
 Euripides

Ignorant men raise questions that wise men
answered a thousand years ago.

 Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Never does nature say one
thing and wisdom another.  
Juvenal

Mr. Thoughtmill Book Store

"The Noble Society" establishes a new, unusual genre. It is part twenty first century fantastic comic book, part profound philosophical literary work. It views the essence of our existence in a new way while at the same time making us laugh. While the characters look, move, think, and act in amusing and seemingly ridiculous ways, the ultimate meaning of the tales is embedded in Vera Nova's surprising ideas that suggest to profoundly change fundamental human concepts such as understanding of mundane reality, independence, money, entertainment, social structures, ethics, love, war, time and space. This beautiful book is a literary, and undoubtedly philosophical treasure."
 
- (C.W. Maes)

"The Noble Society - Adult Fairy Tales from Another Dimension"
by Melissa Henry with M Burroughs

As appreciation for your donation of $50-$100 Nova Town will send you this book by Melissa Henry.

The Utopian fantasy is reinvented for the 21st Century in this dazzling collection of short stories detailing the eternal life and times of the denizens of Bullford, a place beyond our recycled human psyche filled with laughter, hope, and eccentric wisdom.

"The Noble Society" establishes a new, unusual genre. It is part twenty first century fantastic comic book, part profound philosophical literary work. It views the essence of our existence in a new way while at the same time making us laugh. While the characters look, move, think, and act in amusing and seemingly ridiculous ways, the ultimate meaning of the tales is embedded in Vera Nova's surprising ideas profoundly changing fundamental human concepts such as mundane reality, independence, money, entertainment, social structures, ethics, love, war, time and space. This beautiful book is a literary, and undoubtedly philosophical treasure."
 - (C.W. Maes)


"A remarkable and revealing piece of work."
(Professor Ronald Comer,
Princeton University).


Written and brilliantly illustrated by international artist Melissa Henry A generous portion of food for hungry minds. "THE NEW YORK REVIEW OF BOOKS" 2003.

Please contact Nova Town via email: info@novatownsite.org for more information.

 

Melissa Henry is an American artist, writer and philosopher from European stock. Her family has cultural roots extending far back into history and one of Melissa's ancestors on her father's side was the brilliant and successful Viennese composer, Joseph Lanner (Lanner and the Strauss' family were contemporaries)
Melissa Henry attended several European Art and Science Colleges. She has found this conventional education unsatisfying. She has concluded that our postmodern knowledge is missing its very foundation, ignoring the nature's laws which govern and limit our own perception of our existence. While painting and writing since she was a young girl, Melissa began developing  striking ideas on art, philosophy, sociology, mathematics and the psychology of perception.

Melissa Henry's essentially original art style is known as "Subconscious Realism", and is promoted under the name VERA NOVA.

At the present time she is working on her singular manuscripts as well as creating her extraordinary project, NOVA TOWN, an experimental living model, which will eventually be developed into a leading institution for research into solutions to our most important environmental, educational, economic, ethical and cultural problems.

 

Book Reviews

RENOWNED ARTIST'S EXPERIMENTAL NOVEL SMASHES CONVENTIONS;
BLURS FANTASY AND REALITY IN SOCIAL COMMENTARY
-- Melissa Henry's The Noble Society offers an eccentric take on the notion
of Utopia

NEW YORK, NY -- For years, authors from George Orwell to Lewis Carroll to
Ursula LeGuinn have sparked imaginations and aroused heated discussions with
quasi fairy tale books. Now, in The Noble Society, an internationally
acclaimed artist has found a non-traditional way to create a modern fantasy
novel.

Melissa Henry, known throughout the art world as Vera Nova, employs a
distinctive narrative style and refreshingly courteous aristocratic dialogue
in The Noble Society to present a rare combination of a keen modern thought,
satire, and ethical expose.

"The Noble Society unexpectedly twists the necessary conventions of our
own society, and invites the reader to discover a hidden human psyche from a
thoroughly unique perspective - a funnier, happier and wiser existence",
says Henry.

"I virtually chased shapes, manners and traits on my canvas to develop
characters I've not seen before in any art museum, cartoon or a book. They
finally came out from another dimension", adds Henry.

In her stories "from another dimension", Henry reveals a host of characters
who make their way through the mythical community of Bullford; a place
teeming with odd circumstances and fantastic events. The denizens of
Bullford exist in an environment of playful eccentricity; a veritable Utopia
filled with unforgettable personalities such as Mr. Thoughtmill, Lady  Pepperpie, Mr. Greenhorn, and Lady  Cherrypin.

While the characters look, move, think, and act in amusing and seemingly
ridiculous ways, the ultimate meaning of the tales Henry weaves lies in
rethinking fundamental human concepts such as independence, money,
entertainment, social structures, time, ethics, love and war.

Melissa Henry's art (using the name Vera Nova), has been in private
collections throughout the world since 1979, and her works of "subconscious
realism" have been exhibited in major art shows from New York to California.
A musician, Henry has produced four original CD's. In 1995, she founded and
sponsored the international program, "Art Search for the Most Unique Image",
motivated by an idea to "encourage innovative change in art".


THE NEW YORK REVIEW OF BOOKS
February, 2003


"THE NOBLE SOCIETY:
Adult Fairy Tales from Another Dimension"
(Psychological Fiction)


TASTE A HAPPIER REALITY
The Utopian fantasy is reinvented for the 21st Century in this dazzling
collection of short stories detailing the eternal life and times of the
denizens of Bullford, a place beyond our recycled human psyche
filled with laughter, hope, and eccentric wisdom.
Written and brilliantly illustrated
by international artist Melissa Henry
A generous portion of food for hungry minds.


"A remarkable and revealing piece of work."
(Professor Ronald Comer,
Princeton University).


A Review by D. Bennett Smith
"FINE ART MAGAZINE International", NEW YORK ART EXPO, SPRING 2003

The Noble Society: Where Original (and wonderful) Literature Resides

 

Everything, it seems these days, is formulaic. Books are no exception.
Publishing houses churn out thousands of cookie-cutter books, most bereft of
originality, with but a scant few offering something approaching unique
thought.

Then, along comes Melissa Henry's The Noble Society. Having adored her
subconscious realism art (as Vera Nova) for years, I was amazed to discover Henry somehow managed to write with the same wistfulness and understated elegance evident in her paintings. The Noble Society - like Vera Nova's
art - encourages one to think beyond the norm; beyond our self-imposed
limitations of what is real and what is important; beyond the very notion of what
or who we really are.

In her stories "from another dimension", Henry reveals a host of characters
who make their way through the mythical community of Bullford; a place teeming
with odd circumstances and fantastic events. The denizens of Bullford exist in an
environment of playful eccentricity; a veritable Utopia filled with unforgettable
personalities such as Mr. Thoughtmill, Lady Pepperpie, Mr. Greenhorn,
and Lady Cherrypin.

While the characters look, move, think, and act in amusing and seemingly
ridiculous ways, the ultimate meaning of the tales Henry weaves lies in rethinking fundamental human concepts such as independence, money, entertainment, social structures, time, ethics, love and war.

The beauty of The Noble Society comes from its conceptual elusiveness; you
don¹t know, at first reading, why or where this place called Bullford exists, or
what it means. But alas, it falls into place in your mind, the pieces drifting seamlessly together in this fantasy puzzle.

It hits you: You do know this place called Bullford. You do see the words
between the lines of age. You do see the societal glimpses of a virtual Nirvana;
reflecting images which bounce off our own sturdy barriers of what is right and
good and meaningful.

You discover that Bullford "this seemingly bizarre, genteel town with
off-beat inhabitants" is real. You begin to know what Melissa Henry has created
as your very own. You begin to see in your own mind. You know this place.

Or do you?

The Nobel Society Table of Contents  
Introduction, Discovering Bullford

7

The Money Solution 13
The War Story  

- Part One

27

- Part Two

47

- Part Three

57
The New Automobile 73
Society Sporting Life and Chamber Orchestra 97
   
Illustrations  
Ms. Boot 19
Mr. No-Whitenose 25
Hereditary Field Marshall Gentlegrill, The Elder 30
Lady Dancing Fish 63
Capture Rocket 68
Mr. Thoughtmill's Drive 77
Mr. Little Balloon 86
Lady Pepperpie 88
Mr. Gentle Policeman 91
Lady Nova and Mr. Thoughtmill, Dancing 127
   
Color Plates  
Easy Birdie 129
Mr. Green Horn 130
Society Sporting Life, Tennis 131
A Lucky Accident 132 132