The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins was originally published in 1868 in the magazine All the Year Around (edited by Charles Dickens). It is widely considered the first English language detective novel.
Wes:
Wes:
The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins turned
out to be a really interesting Victorian tale of mystery and multi-faceted detective
work. I enjoyed reading it after reading about Charles Dickens’ relationship
with Collins and the fact that this book was also written in serial form over
many months just as many of Dickens’ works were. It also has the reputation of
being one of the first detective novels, that has become an important genre
ever since. I won’t be writing much about the plot or the characters. Suffice
it to say I just enjoyed it. To me it is a classic of the Victorian era which I
seem to have centered a lot of my novel reading upon over the years. I will
just note a few interesting thoughts I had about the book.
I enjoyed the “narrative” arrangement that Collins used
to advance the plot. We see only what the characters saw and how they
interpreted the things under their observation. I noticed that some of the
characters had a distinctively different style, comparing in particular, Mr. Betteredge,
Mr. Bruff, Mr. Blake, and Miss Clack. Even though these characters each had a
certain character style, they all had the characteristic Victorian style of
detailed elaboration of conversations and happenstances that I can’t see people
today ever writing down. A novelist convention from that era for sure!
Mr.
Betteredge’s narrative was particularly interesting. He had a flair for
description and loyalty to the family and to all humanity that really reflected
the usual serious English butler’s outlook. I liked his bandying about with
Sergeant Cuff and his amateur detective intuitions as the Sergeant’s
investigation proceeded. The constant referral to Robinson Crusoe throughout (he allegedly wore out six copies of the
book) was a very innovative concept. It made me wonder whether Wilkie Collins
spent a lot of nights in his leisure chair perusing that volume for his “spiritual
guidance.”
Collins
reveals a definite disdain for Christians with his description of Miss Clack’s
continual and laughable efforts to proselytize Rachel and Mrs. Verinder. The
villain also turned out to be Mr. Godfrey Ablewhite who revealed his real
character to be quite hypocritical in contrast to his public persona as the zealous
and self-righteous missionary type. He turns out to have stolen the diamond for
necessary money to prevent the revelation that he had betrayed a trusteeship by
sacking the account completely and facing imminent discovery. His desperate
need for money was the reason that he acquiesced to Rachel’s rejecting his
marriage proposal when he found he could not loot her estate to save himself.
Turns out he also has a mistress who threatened to reveal herself to Rachel if he
proceeded with his marriage plan.
This
book had a definite page-turning or suspense building motif to it. One kept
expecting the key clue to emerge but the author would repeatedly stop just
short by introducing some complicating factor that would put the proceeding
information in doubt. It almost reads like one of the mini-series of today
where each show ends with a suspense item looming to draw the viewer to the
next show or the Victorian reader to the next installment. This is a very
clever device that Collins used that made me marvel at how he could maintain
the depth of this story for so long. For example, we were continually led to
believe that Mr. Luker had the diamond but then during the opium experiment I
was expecting Mr. Blake to reveal his hiding place somewhere in his room after
all. That would then fulfil Sgt. Cuff’s prediction that the diamond was not
stolen, just lost.
I didn’t
see the need for Ablewhite to die at the hands of the Indian men. They didn’t
do that before when they accosted Mr. Luker and him earlier. But perhaps they
could not take a chance on his stopping them from leaving the country. There
were some details about the 3 Indian guys that I wonder about now, like what
was the significance of the bottle of ink that the boy dropped early in the
story. And what was the significance of that boy whom it was suggested was a
medium? What were they using him for and what happened to him? What was the
identity of the fellow who discovered the rooming site of Ablewhite in his
sailor disguise?
I really enjoyed this book even though it took a little
longer to read it as I struggle to memorize my 156 lines for a play next month.
I will probably have more questions and comments for discussion this month
because there was a lot of interesting stuff in this book. I will also want to
read his other great novel, Woman in
White, some time. After reading this book, I definitely had an attack of
the megrims (a great word – pg. 113!) knowing it was over. Overall, I rate this book as a 2 on my scale of
1-10 (1 as best).
Allison:
I
have a confession to make about our bookclub. I don't always read the book.
This month, with my son out of school and my job demanding extra hours of work
at home, I had hardly any quiet to sit and read. Even the refuge of my daily F train
commute was invaded with project planning for the bookstore. So, I didn't fully
read The Moonstone. But, what I couldn't read, I supplemented by
listening to it (don’t worry! I did actually experience the whole book). I
filled the dead space of daily housekeeping, standing at the sink with dishes
and swabbing bathroom surfaces, with an audio narration of the mystery. I have
heard only a few audio books, but at the bookstore I have witnessed hundreds of
authors read their work—let me tell you, authors reading their work is the
worst. So indulgent, so insufferably boring, and somehow, just false
(exceptions apply, of course). But, a professional voice over artist is quite
different. The ego is eliminated and the story is manifested. The
Moonstone was especially fun, with its various narrations. The reader spoke
in a British accent that he nuanced between speakers—Miss Clack was perhaps the
most delightfully ludicrous, as he narrated for hours in a shrill pomp,
a caricature of feminine stuffiness.
I do feel like I cheated though. The
vocalizations painted in much of the scenery that if I were physically reading,
I'd have to invent for myself. And I wondered frequently if how the actor's
rendering of the story might compare to an interpretation I'd have come to on
my own. He supplied very different voices, different inflections for each
character, but did these variations exist in the text? This would have been an
important consideration had I been solely reading because the dueling
multi-person narrative is the central device Collins uses to tell his story.
How many narrators? Let's see: Betteredge, Miss Clack, Bruff, Blake, Jennings , Sergeant Cuff,
Mr. Candy (not to mention an long letter written by Rosanna Spark) and a
spattering of officials summarizing the end. That's a lot! Over seven main
voices to color and differentiate—seven unique motivations to flesh and
illuminate, all while maintaining momentum and strategic reveal of information
so that the readers are inundated with "detective fever" as Betteredge
called it, eager to play along.
I
had only a mild case of "detective fever." I read a lot of mysteries
and edit a crime fiction magazine with my husband and the mechanics of
"the reveal" are never as interesting to me as the characters.
Reading The Moonstone, I couldn't help but compare Collins' work against
The Mystery of Edwin Drood by Dickens. Collins and Dickens were friends
and spirited competitors alike. In fact, Dickens was the first to publish a
serial version of The Moonstone in his magazine All the Year Around.
Drood was Dickens' attempt to write the perfect mystery, hoped to trump
all predecessors in its masterful plotting and he might have done so if he
hadn't died. Do I think Drood's potential superior to The Moonstone?
Yes. Does it matter? Eh…not so much. They were both satisfying to me in the
same way. Like eating an expensive chocolate truffle followed by a Hershey bar.
I might comment, oh the expensive truffle more delicious, but I'd still happily
eat the Hershey bar. In fact, you would find it hard to tear anything chocolate
away from me.
As
I was Googling around the internet trying to find the publication date, I
discovered a terse two-line poem written about Wilkie by a poet, Swinburne,
that appeared in a literary journal in 1889. It said:
What
brought good Wilkie's genius nigh perdition?
Some
demon whispered—'Wilkie! have a mission'.
(http://www.victorianweb.org/authors/collins/dickens1.html)
This brief, slightly snarky poem, sort of sums
up what I thought about Wilkie's story. I found all of the characters
tremendously entertaining, but their foibles followed a formula from which
Collins' did not deviate. Every character had some obsession that they followed
to the most extreme. With Betteredge, it was an almost religious devotion to
the unorthodox oracle Rob inson
Crusoe. He imbibed in the book like it were a sacred text, which was
hilarious, often laugh-out-loud absurd. Sergeant Cuff had his roses, and Miss
Clack, her puritan religious pamphlets that she spent pages and pages of her
narrative trying to stuff into unwilling characters' hands. Less ridiculous was
Jennings '
addiction to opium, which paralleled Wilkie Collins' own malady. The
Moonstone was written, by Collins' own account during a opiate haze. From
the introduction by Sandra Kemp of my Penguin Classic edition:
"…Collins claimed that he had l ittle
recollection of writing the novel, that he had to dictate large portions of the
story as he lay sick in bed (relieved only by opium), and that he didn't recall
the finale at all" (x). Such an idea, that he could have produced this
work and been so stupefied that he didn't even remember, is almost
unbelievable, and as Kemp notes, probably an exaggeration. Nevertheless, opium
plays a far more sympathetic role in The Moonstone than it did in
Dickens' Drood. Jennings '
curse of need makes almost a martyr of him, and his death, as relayed by Mr.
Candy, is reaching the outer echelons of drama into parodist effect. But I
don't think that was Collins' intent. I think he romanticized opium because he
had to, because he was in the thick of it. Dickens' portrait of opium was far
more grotesque and filthy and unsavory, and l ikely
what it looked l ike to those on the
outside.
In
my Drood post, I mentioned that Donna Tart said Dickens' was a generous
writer who revealed the genius of how he built his narratives for fledgling
writers to discover. Collins is different because he's not revealing a
blueprint of an architectural masterpiece. Instead it's a formula—a specific
set of rules that can be followed to achieve a desired result. Formulas can be
brilliant, in that once perfected, they are infallible. In a right triangle, a2+b2
is going to equal c2.
Likewise,
I eat the chocolate and I am happy.
I give this book a 4 on Dad 's
scale of 1-10 (1 being the best). But a 4 seems so low, for how much I enjoyed
it… Maybe a 3. It's really funny, and only slightly racist and misogynist for
its day.
That book cover you show causes me to wonder where in the book two women were sitting looking out to sea over the "Shimmering Sands"? My edition of the book shows a man and a women sitting and hugging each other gazing out to sea. Again, I don't remember that ever happening either. Did I miss something?
ReplyDeleteIt's funny you mention that. I selected that picture because it is the Penguin Classics edition that I read, but the cover of my book is actually further zoomed out from this scene, revealing the women and a man sitting on a rock, gazing at sailboats on the ocean. NOTHING to do with the book! But the title of the painting is Moonrise by the Sea (Casper David Friedrich, 1822). So maybe the good folks at Penguin liked the moon aspect? Who knows.
DeleteI have been thinking quite a bit about the "serial" aspect of this and Drood. Thinking about what is serialized nowadays in the same way and with the same popularity, and subject to influence by the audience. In my intro to Drood, the author wrote how Dickens would respond in his text to public opinion of the outcome, so the audience had the potential of really interfering with the original plot. Of course TV is the obvious answer, but there are so many people involved with the genesis of each tv show. Stephen King wrote The Green Mile in the late 90's as a serial novel in six installments, and he seems like an author with enough clout and insatiable creativity to be able to write it while publishing, but I don't know if that's how he did it. (He also did an internet only release of another serial novel sometime in the last 15 years) Maybe we should read The Green Mile and compare the serialization aspect.
There's a podcast narrative called Serial that was wildly successful last year. It followed a murder case from the late 90s that ended in an ambiguous conviction and life sentence of teenaged boy. I had really big issues with the "storytelling" aspect of the show, and how because it was serialized, written and produced as it was delivered to the public, it failed at producing a satisfying structure and was often quite manipulative (which stressed me out because I felt is should be more journalism and less fiction). MY POINT, (finally) is I wonder if the formula used in The Moonstone I wrote about, somewhat critically, in the post-- the sort of molds each of the characters fit into was necessary due to the serialization of the book, because each section had to satisfy some expectations while hooking the reader for the next installment. The "serial" aspect really is a particular challenge that modern writers don't face.
The other books I read in June besides the Moonstone include:
ReplyDelete"Grant Comes East" by Newt Gingrich and William R. Forstchen", 5 out of 10
"Congo" by Michael Crichton, 5 out of 10
The Holcroft Covenant" by Robert Ludllum, 6 out of 10
"Christianity Face to Face with Islam" by Robert Louis Wilkin, 5 out of 10
"Queen Victoria's Little Wars" by Byron Farwell, 3 out of 10
Other books I read in June besides The Moonstone:
Delete"Anatomies: A Cultural History of the Human Body" by Hugh Aldersey Williams, 5 out of 10
"The Argonauts" by Maggie Nelson, 4 out of 10