Fotografía de autor

Wendy Walker (1) (1951–)

Autor de The Secret Service

Para otros autores llamados Wendy Walker, ver la página de desambiguación.

9+ Obras 145 Miembros 3 Reseñas

Obras de Wendy Walker

The Secret Service (1992) 71 copias
Stories Out of Omarie (1995) 20 copias
Knots (2006) 8 copias
Blue Fire (2009) 4 copias
The Camperdown Elm (2017) 1 copia
Sexual Stealing (2021) 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre legal
Wendy A. Walker
Fecha de nacimiento
1951
Género
female
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugares de residencia
New York, USA
Relaciones
La Farge, Tom (spouse)

Miembros

Reseñas

These are wonderful retellings of obscure (for me) European folk tales that transcend the genre through the author's masterful literary virtuosity. The point of view moves from first- to third-person, and the tense shifts from past to present, including extended passages in the future subjunctive. The descriptive passages have an idiosyncratic manner that imbues them with an enchantment that is perfect for these stories which seem to exist outside of historical time.
 
Denunciada
le.vert.galant | Nov 19, 2019 |
Murder most foul: A babe found horribly treated in the bottom of a well. Suspicion falls upon the recently remarried father, then his son William, then his daughter Constance; but the case remains unsolved. Five years pass, Constance confesses to her priest, who in turn alerts the authorities. Convicted and sentenced to death, her penalty is reduced to life by the Queen. After twenty years, Constance is released, moves to Australia to live near William, and becomes a nurse. She lives to be a hundred. Before she dies, the "Sydney Document" appears in London, telling all. But can it be believed? Alas, it burns in the Blitz before the handwriting can be examined. The mystery remains.....Blue fire is an indicator of a buried soul.

But all of this is background for a remarkable piece of experimental prose. Claiming that “every text contains its own critique,” Wendy Walker has selected a single word from each line in a book about the crime written by a friend of the murdered child's father. That book, The Great Crime of 1860 by Joseph Stapleton, one of the first “true crime” works ever published, “repelled” Walker with its biases and casual misogyny and this selection technique became a means for her to work through it.

These word strings are paired with extracts taken from writings about the crime and other contemporary texts such as The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins, Sesame and Lilies by John Ruskin, A Child's History of England and The Murder of Edwin Drood by Charles Dickens, Ruth by Elizabeth Gaskell. All the extracts either shed light on the details of the murder or demonstrate the oppressive patriarchy of the Victorian age. Interestingly, the only refreshing voice for me was that of the French historian Hippolyte Taine whose Notes on England give an outsider's view of Victorian hypocrisy.

The words from Stapleton are placed on the verso and the extracted passages on the recto. The verso passages are opaque and cryptic. Like a Greek chorus, they mediate between the reader and the recto texts, sometimes directly, sometimes obliquely. They seem to give voice to the darkness behind the glitter and polish of the extracts. The result is quite unsettling.
… (más)
1 vota
Denunciada
le.vert.galant | Jan 26, 2015 |
Wendy Walker's The Secret Service is a latter-day gothic novel made more interesting than many of its progenitors by the quality, sentence for sentence, of Walker's writing. Her elegant prose is in service of a story about an English secret service whose members can assume other forms—goblets, roses, privet hedges—in order to infiltrate enemies' strongholds, strongholds that, in the best gothic tradition, are replete with secret passages, garden mazes, and towers that imprison missing princesses. All of this allows Walker to meditate fruitfully on the boundaries between the human and the not-human, boundaries we like to believe are immutable. The center section, in which one of the agents is trapped between object and human, is a tour-de-force, but so powerful (and long) is it that it overbalances, to some extent, the story that surrounds it, but it is in itself such a pleasure that one doesn't mind. It is wrong that book of this quality should be out-of-print.… (más)
2 vota
Denunciada
dcozy | Jan 16, 2011 |

Premios

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Estadísticas

Obras
9
También por
3
Miembros
145
Popularidad
#142,479
Valoración
½ 4.3
Reseñas
3
ISBNs
158
Idiomas
12

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