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The Mystery of Lewis Carroll Jenny Woolf

The Mystery of Lewis Carroll By Jenny Woolf

The Mystery of Lewis Carroll by Jenny Woolf


$20.99
Condition - Very Good
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Summary

Lewis Carroll has painted a picture of the man based on her thorough research, with accurate descriptions, and her evidence is clear and well presented. This title helps us understand and appreciate this famous Victorian poet, mathematician, writer, photographer, and children's author.

The Mystery of Lewis Carroll Summary

The Mystery of Lewis Carroll: Understanding the Author of Alice in Wonderland by Jenny Woolf

Jenny Woolf's biography of Lewis Carroll takes notice of the evidence that is now available to help us understand and appreciate this famous Victorian poet, mathematician, writer, photographer, and children's author. She has painted a picture of the man based on her thorough research, with accurate descriptions, and her evidence is clear and well presented.

The Mystery of Lewis Carroll Reviews

From USA Today, 12 January 2010 'Woolf sheds more light on the mysterious Dodgson in this new biography, examining everything from his relationship with Alice and her older sister to his controversial photographing of nude young girls. 'The more closely Lewis Carroll is studied, the more he seems to slide quietly away,' Woolf writes' - Craig Wilson. http://www.usatoday.com/life/books/news/2010-01-12-alice12_ST_N.htm -- Craig Wilson USA Today 20100112 'In her book, The Mystery of Lewis Carroll, to be published next month, Woolf says the payments show that he detested the idea of children or any helpless creature being abused. He was certainly not trying to assuage a guilty conscience, she believes.' The Sunday Times 20100214 'For decades, biographers of Lewis Carroll have been too fixated on the question of whether the author of Alice in Wonderland was a secret pedophile who got away with taking pictures of scantily-dressed girls during the Victorian era. But a new book by English author Jenny Woolf, out today in the U.K. to coincide with Tim Burton's 'Alice' film, claims that the unearthing of never-before-published bank statements absolves him of many of the wild allegations made against him over the years. 'The Mystery of Lewis Carroll' goes beyond the central controversy over his life to shed light on a man who has proved elusive to his biographers.' -- Javier Espinoza The WSJ 20100305 'Woolf's research and reading of other Carroll biographies is extensive and this comes together to provide a very comprehensive and fascinating overview of the author that gave the world Alice. This highly recommended biography will allow the reader to learn much of Carroll and the times into which he was born.' Fantasy Book Review 20100218 'Woolf sheds more light on the mysterious Dodgson in this new biography, examining everything from his relationship with Alice and her older sister to his controversial photographing of nude young girls. 'The more closely Lewis Carroll is studied, the more he seems to slide quietly away,' Woolf writes' -- Craig Wilson USA Today 20100112 The Mystery of Lewis Carroll reveals new facts about the famous mathematician and author of Alice In Wonderland. Lewis Carroll's real name was Charles Lutwidge Dodgson. Woolf uses recently discovered facts, such as Carroll's accounts ledger and unpublished correspondence with his Alice Liddell's family. Alice was the daughter of his dean at Oxford and inspiration for Alice In Wonderland. Woolf explores how Carroll was repressed by the Victorian era as well as his upbringing as a cleric's son. There were many rumors about Carroll, was he in love with young girls or was it the idea of innocents? There are also rumors that he had affairs with married women. Woolf tries to dispel some of the worst rumors about Carroll. She talks about his love for photography and how he took photographs of friend's children nude, a common practice during the Victorian age rather than an indication of pedophilia. There's no evidence that he harmed any children, although some say he wished to marry 11-year-old Alice Liddell. Four lost volumes of his 13-volume personal diaries might tell that story, if they're ever found. Woolf got the idea for the book about Carroll after she found his personal bank account, forgotten and unnoticed in an archive for over a hundred years. Once transcribed and interpreted, it revealed much about this interesting man. Woolf used documents and family letters to piece together Carroll's life from various archives all over the world. Some of them I visited in person, others list their holdings online and researchers can buy photocopies of relevant documents, says Woolf. Some of the material had been transcribed by other researchers and some experts and collectors kindly allowed me the run of their material. I read all the biographies, plus any monographs, studies, and magazine articles, and all the original documents I could find which had not been published, says Woolf. I also consulted letters, published and unpublished, and the nine existing volumes of his diary. In short, a lot of work. I wanted to be sure I had seen as much as possible so I could put together my own impression of this intriguing man. The BBC produced a half hour program about Woolf's discovery of Carroll's personal bank account. There's been movie interest in the book from a British company doing TV co-productions, says Woolf. It's been interesting to me to realize how many different types of people are interested in Lewis Carroll, from sweet old ladies to the likes of Marilyn Manson.... The original publisher of this book is Haus in the UK, says Flamini [of St. Martins Press]. I gave all of my editorial suggestions to the wonderful editor there who worked on this book. They've produced a great book that is also a beautiful object.... The Mystery of Lewis Carroll is the perfect book for those who love Alice in Wonderland and want to know more about its unusual author.' Hollywood Today 20100214 'To coincide with the release of the film, this biography seeks to redress the misconceptions that have grown over Lewis Carroll's personal life.' The Times 20100302 'To his adoring readers he was Lewis Carroll, the sweet-natured writer who wandered through life with a head full of stories. To his long-suffering colleagues in Oxford he was the Rev Charles Dodgson, the prickly mathematician who walked around with a poker-straight back and a head full of algebra. The two were like strangers who merely happened to inhabit the same skin.Both sides of him would have appreciated Jenny Woolf's sensible and generous new biography, The Mystery of Lewis Carroll... Dodgson might ruefully have recognised the contradictions of a professional life in which he upheld standard forms of piety in public while privately devouring books about ghosts and witchcraft. Carroll might have been grateful for the detective work involved in going through his bank account, which shows that the figure post-Freudian readers have been encouraged to see as pathetically seedy, if not actively predatory, actually donated large sums to charities that supported children who had been sexually exploited. Both would have been thankful for Woolf's dismissal of previous biographers' more lurid hypotheses, from drug addiction to stories about Jack the Ripper, and both would have enjoyed Woolf's own enjoyment at his verbal gymnastics and philosophical contortions. They might even have been briefly reconciled before they resumed their endless quarrel, like a real-life Tweedledum and Tweedledee.' The Telegraph 20100308 Woolf has uncovered new evidence, mostly in the form of letters, about the mysterious, often-contradictory life of Charles Lutwidge Dodson... Woolf admires Carroll, and works hard to answer long-standing questions about his life and work. Minneapolis Star Tribune 20110701

About Jenny Woolf

Jenny Woolf has been a freelance journalist for UK national newspapers and was a contributing editor of the American travel magazine Islands. She continued to work for British and foreign publications and for the BBC, for whom she made a Radio 4 programme about Lewis Carroll in 2006. She has had a lifelong interest in Carroll and is the author of Lewis Carroll In His Own Account (2005). Jenny can be found online at her website: http://www.jabberwock.co.uk/

Additional information

GOR002453058
9781906598686
1906598681
The Mystery of Lewis Carroll: Understanding the Author of Alice in Wonderland by Jenny Woolf
Used - Very Good
Hardback
Haus Publishing
20100215
256
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - The Mystery of Lewis Carroll