From rec.arts.sf.reviews Tue May 18 22:29:29 1999 Path: news.ifm.liu.se!news.lth.se!feed2.news.luth.se!luth.se!arclight.uoregon.edu!gatech!18.181.0.27.MISMATCH!sipb-server-1.mit.edu!senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!usenet From: pj@willowsoft.compulink.co.uk (Paul S Jenkins) Newsgroups: rec.arts.sf.reviews Subject: Review: Robertson Davies' _Murther & Walking Spirits_ Followup-To: rec.arts.sf.written Date: 11 May 1999 13:15:37 -0400 Organization: CIX - Compulink Information eXchange Lines: 38 Sender: wex@tinbergen.media.mit.edu Approved: wex@media.mit.edu Message-ID: Reply-To: pj@willowsoft.compulink.co.uk NNTP-Posting-Host: tinbergen.media.mit.edu X-Newsreader: Gnus v5.3/Emacs 19.34 Xref: news.ifm.liu.se rec.arts.sf.reviews:2292 _Murther & Walking Spirits_ by Robertson Davies Review Copyright (c) 1999 Paul S. Jenkins This is a frame story; journalist Connor Gilmartin, having been unceremoniously murdered by his wife's lover, sits incorporeally next to his murderer at the Toronto Film Festival, watching from the afterlife as a filmic representation of the lives of his forebears is presented to him. The drama-documentary is in Davies' typical style, with his broad sweep across generations -- more so than usual as he can invent dramatic points of view without restriction. The story of Gil's ancestors is one of struggle and hardship -- a history of Canadian settlers. But what do we learn from this? We see what it's like for the prior generations, but there's little sense of an overall plot. It's a kind of fictional multi-memoir. Davies' writing style is a joy to indulge in, but the detachment that the 'frame device' inevitably brings gives the memoir a dispassionate slant -- reinforced by the narrator's continual references to his own spiritual state. It's a strange book -- involving and superbly written, but at the end curiously unsatisfying -- as if it was leading up to something that never quite occurs. It lacks the detailed characterization and sheer power of some of Davies' other work -- the Cornish trilogy, for example. What we actually get in _Murther_ is a resolution of sorts, but not of the 'history'. The narrator seeks a kind of peace; the reader waits for a climax to the book, and ends up with something else. %A Davies, Robertson %T Murther & Walking Spirits %I Penguin %C London %D 1992 %G ISBN 0 14 015932 0 %P 357 pp. %O paperback GBP 5.99 Paul S. Jenkins | More reviews at: Portsmouth UK | http://www.cix.co.uk/~willowsoft/revup/