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Keneally, Thomas 1935–: Critical Essay by Peter Ackroyd

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About 1 pages (310 words)
Thomas Keneally Summary

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Although the publishers describe [A Victim of the Aurora] as 'Thomas Keneally's first detective story', it effectively marks the demise of that debased and flatulent genre…. It is set at the close of the sticky Edwardian era and so, theoretically, it might be described just as easily as an historical novel—but, like all of Keneally's work it actually subverts European history … by bringing to it alien and more vigorous perceptions…. In Keneally's hands the historical novel is redeemed as the raw materials of the past are turned into a kind of fable.

These blinding metaphysical matters don't mean that Keneally is forgetful of technical considerations. He astutely aligns the imaginative content of historical fiction with the pert structure of the detective thriller, and by conflating them creates a new thing. (p. 19)

This is a free excerpt of 132 words. There are 310 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.

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Keneally, Thomas 1935–: Critical Essay by Peter Ackroyd from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.



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