Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Carey, Peter (Vol. 183) - Richard Eder (review date 1 February 1998)


Carey, Peter (Vol. 183) - Richard Eder (review date 1 February 1998)

Richard Eder (review date 1 February 1998)

SOURCE: Eder, Richard. “Bleak House.” Los Angeles Times Book Review (1 February 1998): 2.

[In the following review, Eder describes Jack Maggs as a brilliantly written novel, likening Carey's text to a work Charles Dickens might have written if he were not constrained by the social mores of the nineteenth-century.]

A former convict, deported to Australia and prospering there, returns illegally to England in the 1830s to present himself to the young recipient of his mysterious benefactions. It must be Magwitch, of course, Pip's patron in Charles Dickens' Great Expectations. It must be, that is, except that it is Maggs, protagonist of Peter Carey's new novel [Jack Maggs].

Like Magwitch, Jack Maggs moves amid a swirl of sights, smells, passions and plots that limn a time of radical British expansion and grim misery. He too must conceal himself for fear of hanging. He...

[The entire page is 1239 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the: