A Response to The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time

FAR MORE IMPORTANT than the literary awards it has won, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time's ability to rock our conception of what is normal or dysfunctional, clear-headed or soft-hearted, significant or insignificant, symbolic or real, speaks powerfully to our “PC” culture. Christopher Boone, Mark Haddon's protagonist, is a benevolent monstrosity. This sounds negative but Chris has just the right blend of what philosopher of horror literature, Noel Carroll, calls ontic ambiguity. Like Frankenstein's monster before him, Christopher lacks a tell-tale human quality – genuine emotional empathy. His limitations, even his inability to understand nuanced feelings and

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A Review of The Mystery of Edwin Drood

Once I got over the Dickensian style, especially the delicate china doll description of his woman protagonist, Rosa Bud, I was hooked. This sadly foreshortened-by-death novel reveals as much in its superb descriptions, including a humanly depicted dish set, that speaks to the reader, as it does in its plot.

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