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Jack Maggs
 
 

Jack Maggs [Kindle Edition]

Peter Carey
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

As a novelist, Peter Carey is hardly a stranger to the 19th century: his Oscar and Lucinda was a veritable treasure-trove of Victoriana. In this novel, however, Carey has set himself an even more complicated task--reinterpreting not only a vanished era but one of that era's masterpieces. Jack Maggs is a variation on Great Expectations, in which Dickens's tale is told from the viewpoint of Australian convict Abel Magwitch. The names, it's true, have been tinkered with, but the book's literary paternity is unmistakable. So, too, is the post- colonial spin that Carey puts on Dickens's material: this time around, the prodigal Maggs is perceived less as an invading alien than a righteous (if not particularly welcome) refugee.

Of course, rewriting a page-turner from the past offers some major perils, not the least of them being comparisons to the original. Carey, however, more than withstands the test of time, alluding to the formality of Victorian prose without ever bending over backward to duplicate it. In addition, his eye for physical detail--and the ways in which such details open small or large windows onto character--is on par with that of Dickens. Here, for example, he pins down both the body and soul of a household servant: "Miss Mott was lean and sinewy and there was nowhere much for such a violent shiver to hide itself. Consequently it went right up her spine and disappeared inside her little white cap and then, just when it seemed lost, it came out the other side and pulled up the ends of her thin mouth in a grimace." Throw in a wicked mastery of period slang, a subplot about Victorian mesmerism (of which Dickens was, in fact, a practitioner) and an amazing storytelling gift, and you have a novel which meets and exceeds almost any expectation one might bring to it.

Book Description

The thrilling historical novel from twice Booker-winner Peter Carey

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 1044 KB
  • Print Length: 339 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN: 0571270174
  • Publisher: Faber and Faber Fiction (20 May 2010)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B003O2SCV0
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (18 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #45,850 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Peter Carey
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
A riveting yarn 4 April 2008
By Aesop
Format:Paperback
Not sure what I was expecting when I bought this book, other than to say the synopsis caught my interest. The first pages didn't lead me to suspect it was going to reel me in as surely as it did. The main character was written superbly; a tough, scarred and tortured soul, a deported criminal forever exiled, sneaking back home to London in 1837 after the harshest years served in a penal colony in Australia and after having made his fortune. For thirty years Jack Maggs has been away, and now he's back on a mission.

Everything here worked splendidly, the mood, the many characters, the story's unfolding. Pointless making the Dickens comparison simply because it's Victorian England. Judge this tale on its own merits. It ended too quickly for me!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
I'd read "Oscar and Lucinda", but this book is far better; more pace, and stunningly atmospheric in its immersion in mid-19C London. Loads of historical details that take you back in time, not just in the 'history book' facts but also in the way people were and how they got through from day to day. Easy to read, fascinating interplay of human relationships. Superb!
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19 of 23 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
Peter Carey's Jack Maggs.

This thrilling and original story, part historical novel and part literary fantasy, is one of the most exciting, erudite, and compulsively readable works of fiction to come along in recent years.

London, 1837. Jack Maggs, a foundling trained as a thief, betrayed and deported to a penal colony in Australia, has reversed his fortunes. Under threat of execution he returns to London after twenty years of exile to try to fulfill his well-concealed heart's desire. Masquerading as a footman, Maggs places himself in the rather eccentric household of Percy Buckle, Esquire. But when the unlikely footman comes under the scrutiny of the brilliant and unscrupulous young novelist Tobias Oates, an enthusiastic dabbler in mesmerism, Maggs's secrets are revealed and he is forced to take desperate, sometimes violent action. A powerful and unusual homage to Charles Dickens's Great Expectations, Jack Maggs displays all of Peter Carey's broad historical and artistic knowledge, his masterful command of character, and his powerful moral vision.

Fulfilling Expectations Peter Carey's new novel, Jack Maggs, spins an enthralling variation on a Dickens classic

Banished for life to New South Wales, a convict eventually returns to 19th century London, risking hanging if the law discovers him, all because he wants to see Henry Phipps, the young English gentleman he has "made" by sending money from abroad. Does that premise sound familiar? It will to those who have read Charles Dickens' Great Expectations and remember Pip's turmoil when he learns that his elevation in society has been financed by the fearsome felon Abel Magwitch. The novel being described here, however, is Peter Carey's Jack Maggs. What the dickens is Dickens' plot doing in Carey's new fiction?

Nothing very promising, those familiar with postmodernist literary and largely sterile ironies might guess. In this instance, they would be wrong. For one thing, it is not necessary to know a single word of Great Expectations to have a fine, suspenseful time reading Jack Maggs. Carey takes a cue from Dickens but then ad-libs an original and freestanding performance, replete with the sorts of twists and shocks and coincidences that originally gave page turners a good name. And those readers who retain a clear sense of Dickens' novel will encounter a trove of subtle allusions, not just to the 19th century author's life and works but also to the predatory relationship between an inventor of tales and the real-life subjects who find themselves grist for this creative mill.

Jack Maggs' search for Henry Phipps bumps into an immediate obstacle: Phipps is not to be found at the house where Maggs' money installed him. So the convict takes an expedient job as a footman at the house next door, the better to spot Phipps when he returns. Very quickly--Carey mimes perfectly the Victorian novelist's skill at making the implausible seem inevitable--Maggs comes to the attention of one of his master's dinner guests, the rising young author Tobias Oates. When Maggs, serving the wine, collapses from the pain of a tic douloureux in his cheek, Oates volunteers to relieve the servant's anguish by mesmerizing, i.e., hypnotizing, him. Maggs, a man desperate to keep secrets, is at the mercy of Oates, a man avid to exploit them.

The struggle between Maggs and Oates, a character obviously based on Dickens and lacking only the original's extenuating genius, forms the stem of Carey's plot. But, as befits a mock-19th century novel, there are many fascinating exfoliations. All of Carey's major characters come equipped with vivid childhoods--not just Maggs, thrown on a Thames mud flat as an infant and adopted in order to be trained as a thief, or Oates, humiliated and impoverished young by a feckless father. There is also Mercy Larkin, who befriends Maggs and who was sent into prostitution when barely more than a child by her own mother.

Because of the publishing mores of his time, Dickens could not write directly about prostitutes or abortionists or homosexuals, although coded references to them could be discerned by those in the know. In Jack Maggs, Carey breaks the old code and produces something wonderfully new.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
brought to life on audiobook
i thoroughly enjoyed hearing this tale read expertly by Steven Crossley. he brought all the characters to life in a gripping story. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Wilf
Confused reader
A bit like the curates egg, good in parts. Not an easy read I found it confusing but non the less an interesting tale.
Published 1 month ago by Mr. K. Wareham
A really good read
I'm usually not convinced by Peter Carey, but I really enjoyed this book. It's welll constructed, the characters are three dimensional and convincing, the motivations ring true and... Read more
Published 5 months ago by The Bagster
If I want to read Dickens, I'll read Dickens
This is a pastiche reflected in the title, which recalls the name of Magwitch the convict from Great Expectations who is deported to Australia, the exploitation of children seen in... Read more
Published 8 months ago by John Fitzpatrick
Sublime storytelling
I've always had a fondness for crime novels set in Victorian London (the book is set in the first year of her reign actually), but few of the many I've read can equal 'Jack Maggs'... Read more
Published on 6 Jan 2007 by Didier
Something a bit weird but quite interesting
The book I have to read for my English entrance examination... Took a while to get into this book, and get what it was about. After 50 pages I was still totally uninspired... Read more
Published on 13 July 2006 by Faith
Tracks of the cat
Jack Maggs arrives in London carrying a dark secret in his baggage. He's escaped the ferocity of Captain Logan's Moreton Bay penal colony. Read more
Published on 9 Nov 2004 by Stephen A. Haines
eucatastrophe
A novel of the criminal mind like his later "True
history of the Ned Kelly gang", Peter Carey's "Jack Maggs" is also an earlier stage in his evolving of... Read more
Published on 11 Dec 2001 by johnnybird
Fantastic, dark and beautifully written
This has to be one of the best books I have read in ages. Carey, manages to encapsulate the whole Dickensian air without taking away from his own style. Read more
Published on 15 May 2001
Perfection
Possibly the best book I've read in the last tweleve months. I would highly recommended to anyone who is prepared to bend history a little, ignore comparisons with other authors... Read more
Published on 21 Oct 2000
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