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World of Wonders (novel)

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Country
  
Canada

Series
  
The Deptford Trilogy

Pages
  
316

Author
  
Robertson Davies

Page count
  
316

ISBN
  
9780670788125

4.1/5
Goodreads

Language
  
English

Media type
  
Paperback

Originally published
  
1975

Preceded by
  
The Manticore

Genre
  
Fiction

World of Wonders (novel) t3gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcR6XBRr7whcXevRB

Similar
  
Robertson Davies books, Fiction books, Classical Studies books

World of Wonders is the third novel in Robertson Davies' Deptford Trilogy.

Contents

First published by Macmillan of Canada in 1975, this novel focuses on the life-story of the fictional conjuror Magnus Eisengrim.

Plot

Magnus Eisengrim (also known by at least four other names throughout the trilogy) tells the story of his life to a group of filmmakers who are producing a biographical film about the great magician Jean Eugène Robert-Houdin for the BBC. They are headed by the world famous Swedish director Jurgen Lind, evidently modeled on Ingmar Bergman. Also present during the story are Eisengrim's friends Dunstan Ramsay and Liesl, who both appear in the earlier instalments of the Deptford Trilogy. Ramsay reprises the role of narrator that he played in the first novel, Fifth Business, but in this case it is only to add context and continuity to the internal narration of Eisengrim. The life story of Eisengrim pulls together many events found throughout the previous two novels, showing them from an entirely different perspective.

A Bottle in the Smoke

This section deals with Paul's life travelling with Wanless World of Wonders carnival as well as playing in vaudeville theatres during the winters. The section title derives from the biblical reference to a bottle as a goatskin that has been cured and hardened by smoke from a fire. Paul has similarly been hardened by his experiences at the hands of Willard, the magician who abducts Paul and subjects him to sexual abuse.

Merlin's Laugh

In this section, Paul has arrived in London and is recruited as a stunt double to Sir John Tresize, actor-manager of a stage company. After playing stages in London and elsewhere in Britain, the troop does a long tour in Canada. Paul, who is called Mungo Fetch within the company, is strongly influenced by both Tresize and his wife, "Milady". In the telling, Magnus reveals that Ingestree as a young man had also joined Tresize's troop and had embarrassed himself in several ways. Magnus also shows how Ingestree later revenged himself on Tresize by a spiteful act.

Le Lit de Justice

In this epilogue section, Liesl, Magnus, and Dunstan share a large bed (lit) in the Savoy hotel in London after the completion of the film. Dunstan and Liesl question Magnus based on his earlier revelations, and the mystery of the death of Boy Staunton is finally resolved.

Primary Characters

  • Magnus Eisengrim — As the main focus of the novel, much of the story revolves around Eisengrim telling his life story in order to explain his context for playing the character of Robert Houdin.
  • Dunstan Ramsay — The narrator and good friend of both Eisengrim and Liesl.
  • Liesl
  • Jurgen Lind
  • Roland Ingestree - Executive producer of the film for the BBC
  • Kinghovn - Lind's cameraman
  • Themes

    The book contains an extended treatment of the paedophillic abuse inflicted on the young Eisengrim by his abductor who repeatedly sodomizes him and uses him to obtain morphine, but in turn teaches him hand magic. The book explains that such are the sacrifices one must expect to make in order to master completely some sphere of human activity---magic in the case of Eisengrim.

    References

    World of Wonders (novel) Wikipedia