Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Carey, Peter (Vol. 183) - D. J. Taylor (review date 8 January 2001)


Carey, Peter (Vol. 183) - D. J. Taylor (review date 8 January 2001)

D. J. Taylor (review date 8 January 2001)

SOURCE: Taylor, D. J. “A Ventriloquist's Tale.” New Statesman 130, no. 4519 (8 January 2001): 42.

[In the following review, Taylor comments that although Carey's conjectures regarding Ned Kelly's thoughts and actions in True History of the Kelly Gang are enjoyable, they ultimately render the story as a work of historical fiction rather than biography.]

For a work explicitly promoted as a defence of the historical novel, A. S. Byatt's recent On Histories and Stories (Chatto and Windus) is oddly light on references to Peter Carey: just a couple of glancing mentions in among the analyses of Fitzgerald, Fowles, Golding and co. While no one expects exhaustiveness from a book with less than 200 pages, this neglect is something of a surprise, as few English language novelists of the past 20 years have played such dramatic and energetic games with history.

Jack Maggs (1997)...

[The entire page is 694 words long]

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