![]() ![]() Oates has other tawdry secrets-an affair with his sister-in-law, monstrous debts, the legacy of a terrible childhood-but he is protected by the veneer of respectability. Under hypnosis, Maggs reveals some of his secrets, and Oates determines-without informing Maggs-to make his reputation with a novel about the criminal mind. An attack of tic doloureux brings Maggs to the attention of ambitious young writer Tobias Oates, who employs the newly fashionable ""science"" of animal magnetism to draw out the ""phantom"" in Maggs's subconscious that is causing the pain. Circumstances propel Maggs into the home of Sir Percival Buckle, where he is quickly employed as a footman, and where he catches the eye of a saucy chambermaid with a tragic past. He's a dead man if discovered, but he's obsessed with finding his (adoptive) son, whom he's been supporting for years-facts we glean in small, suspenseful increments. ![]() ![]() His name, we eventually learn, is Jack Maggs (read Abel Magwitch), and he has illegally returned to England from Australia, where he was brutally used in the penal colony. In 1837, a mysterious man-hulking, silent, missing two fingers-steps off the coach in London. With great panache, he executes an abundantly atmospheric and rollickingly entertaining reprise of Great Expectations. If any contemporary author has the goods to pull off a variation on Dickens, Carey (The Unusual Life of Tristan Smith) is certainly the man. ![]()
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