I read this book for the Mount TBR
Reading Challenge hosted over at My Reader’s Block from January 1 – December 31, 2015. The challenge is to read books
that you already own.
No Name –
Wilkie Collins
Critics and fans consider this one Collins’ third best
novel, after The Woman in White
(which he himself thought his best) and The
Moonstone (still credited as the first detective novel). I found the plot of
No Name absorbing, far-fetched but
never ridiculous as in The Dead
Secret. In fact, I think Collins wanted to showcase his own marvelous ingenuity
in creating a plot and spinning out narrative with various techniques.
This novel opens on a domestic Trollopian note. Two grown
sisters enjoy life, loved by their rich parents and secure in domestic comfort.
But a series of disasters occurs. The sisters find themselves without their
parents and because of the cruel laws of bastardy, they are revealed as
illegitimate and stripped of their parents’ estate. It lands in the avaricious
hands of a mean cousin who refuses to help the girls even though he knows it
was the intention of their father to provide for them.
The middle of the novel returns to the atmosphere of
intrigue in The
Woman in White. That is, the passionate sister vows to take back the legacy
by any means necessary. She is helped by a Count Fosco-type villain – ruthless,
charming, and a delight whenever he’s in the scene. The book is worth reading
just for Capt. Wragge. His gift of gab would have been perfect for W.C. Fields.
The middle section features a game of wits and skullduggery between two shrewd
gamesters.
The last quarter or so does not let up either, so right
to the end I was engrossed. He uses exchanges of letters to speed the plot
along. He cuffs around middle-class smug respectability and keeping up
appearances too. He does not make a big show of cutting down middle-class
hypocrisy, but he makes sure we know he stands on the side of the individual
against mindless conformity and a society too submissive to antique laws,
endless red tape, and modern regulation
Some readers may grumble that Collins isn’t as funny as
Dickens and has fewer wise asides than Trollope. Still, I rather like these
digressions
Examples may be found every day
of a fool who is no coward; examples may be found occasionally of a fool who is
not cunning; but it may reasonably be doubted whether there is a producible
instance anywhere of a fool who is not cruel.
Resist it as firmly, despise it
as proudly as we may, all studied unkindness—no matter how contemptible it may
be—has a stinging power in it which reaches to the quick.
Collins doesn’t do scenery or weather either. It’s hard
to know the season sometimes. I think he knew his audience – young, urban, busy, on
the way up - enough to know lots of readers just skim that stuff anyway.
In conclusion, I think readers that liked The Woman in White would probably like
this one.
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