Everything you need to understand or teach
Caroline Blackwood.
Products may contain comprehensive summaries, analysis, notes, articles, essays,
lesson plans and more. See below for details on what is included.
Below, Kemp reviews The Fate of Mary Rose and discusses Blackwood's style of detached writing about very emotional subjects, particularly wounded children.
Wounds appall and fascinate Caroline ...
Read more
In the review below, Kendall explains the transformation of Devina Blunt from a depressed widow to a lively, caring woman.
Gentle, compliant and accomplished at all the wifely graces, Devina Blunt [th...
Read more
In the following review, Robinson argues that Blackwood ignores such larger political issues as Britain's military commitments and instead focuses on the violence and sexuality associated with ...
Read more
In the essay below, Jones examines themes common to five of Blackwood's works and argues that Blackwood writes in a Gothic tradition in which doom is inherent and life has no greater meaning.
O...
Read more
In the review below, Lonrigg offers an unfavorable assessment of In the Pink, charging that the book is inaccurate and lacks purpose.
In the Pink reads as though Caroline Blackwood wrote a series of l...
Read more
In the following excerpt, Hastings charges that In the Pink is not on par with Balckwood's earlier works and fails to capture the romance of fox hunting.
Caroline Blackwood … is a rich, ...
Read more
In the review below, Parker praises In the Pink as a well-written and impartial account of fox hunting in England.
As someone who was taken hunting as a child, I have always considered blood-sports mo...
Read more
In the following review, the critic describes Blackwood's account of Wallis Simpson's later life as a "dark fairy tale."
[The Last of the Duchess is] the chronicle of dogge...
Read more
In the review below, Kakutani argues that Blackwood does not stick to the facts in The Last of the Duchess and therefore destroys her credibility.
This fascinating but ultimately disingenuous new book...
Read more
In the review below, Gerston argues that The Last of the Duchess ultimately fails because Blackwood relies too much on speculation.
Caroline Blackwood's investigation into the last years of the...
Read more
In the review below, Yardley describes The Last of the Duchess as an odd, dark story that is both witty and perceptive.
This peculiar but beguiling book is the account of how its author, a British jou...
Read more
In the following excerpt, Milton argues that Blackwood successfully develops conflict between the characters in The Fate of Mary Rose but deviates from her initial concerns and fails to conclude the &...
Read more
In the following review, Annan argues that although Blackwood does not present any new revelations in The Last of the Duchess, her sharp perception and witty style make for enjoyable reading.
The Last...
Read more
In the following essay, Kimmelman surveys Blackwood's life and literary career.
When Lady Caroline Blackwood, the Irish writer and Guinness heiress, was living in Paris in the early 1950'...
Read more
Below, Stone criticizes Blackwood's plot and character development in Corrigan.
Caroline Blackwood tends to see human relationships as sick jokes. Her novels are variations on The Defiant Ones,...
Read more
In the following review, Heller contends that Blackwood's account of Simpson's life in The Last of the Duchess relies too heavily on speculation and contributes little to her subject...
Read more
In the obituary below, Kimmelman provides an overview of Blackwood's life and career.
Lady Caroline Blackwood, a writer of wry, macabre novels and essays, and a beguiling Anglo-Irish aristocrat...
Read more
In the excerpt below, Ingoldby describes the characters from Good Night Sweet Ladies as well-developed and the story as funny, but suggests that Blackwood does not develop conflict within the stories ...
Read more
Below, Ruthven reviews On the Perimeter, a nonfiction account of women campaigning against an American cruise missile base in England.
Caroline Blackwood first visited the Cruise missile protest camps...
Read more
In the following excerpt, Spice compares Blackwood's views on women, as presented in On the Perimeter, to those presented in John Updike's The Witches of Eastwick.
It can't be dou...
Read more
In the following review, Longford favorably reviews On the Perimeter, arguing that Blackwood raises questions about many larger issues.
It is impossible to imagine a more vivid account of the Greenham...
Read more
Below, Simms provides a favorable review of On the Perimeter.
In March 1984, novelist Caroline Blackwood visited the Greenham Common women's peace camps for the first time. She was appalled by ...
Read more
In the following review, the critic states that although Blackwood's plot in Corrigan is predictable, her dialogue and observations are well-written.
The life-enhancing, restorative con-man...
Read more
In the following review, Gaiser examines Blackwood's depiction in Corrigan of victimization and malice.
In Corrigan, her fourth novel, the Irish writer Caroline Blackwood continues to expose th...
Read more