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Fiction Literary

Transformations

by (author) James King

Publisher
Cormorant Books
Initial publish date
Oct 2004
Category
Literary, Occult & Supernatural, Historical
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9781896951577
    Publish Date
    Sep 2003
    List Price
    $29.95
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781896951744
    Publish Date
    Oct 2004
    List Price
    $21.95

Classroom Resources

Where to buy it

Out of print

This edition is not currently available in bookstores. Check your local library or search for used copies at Abebooks.

Description

Daniel Home is a frequent guest at society soirées in Victorian London, where he presides over séances replete with levitating tables, ghostly apparitions, and inexplicable happenings. After one such evening, Robert Browning denounces Home as a scoundrel, a fake — although there exists no proof to substantiate the accusation.

 

Browning’s claim hangs over Daniel, a thin and reclusive man, for the rest of his life — not because he is a fake, but because his “gift” has never been of benefit to him.

 

Eventually, Daniel leaves London for Florence, where he attempts to fit into the English colony of painters, writers, and collectors — all of whom are misfits of one kind or another. Florence, however, does not afford Home the peace he hopes for; in fact, he finds himself the subject of vicious rumours and the victim of an attempt on his life.

 

Word of Home’s gift reaches the shores of the U.S., in the midst of the Civil War. He is called upon to travel to Washington to assist Mary Todd Lincoln in contacting her dead son. It is in this séance that Homes first experiences his own gifts — it is an experience that transforms him and is of lasting benefit for the Lincolns.

About the author

James King is the author of four previous novels: Faking (1999), Blue Moon (2000), Transformations (2003), and Pure Inventions (2006). He is also the author of eight works of biography, the subjects of which include William Blake, Margaret Laurence, Jack McClelland, and Farley Mowat. His biography of Herbert Read, The Last Modern, was nominated for the Governor General's Literary Award. James King lives in Hamilton, Ontario, and teaches at McMaster University in the Department of English.

James King's profile page

Editorial Reviews

“King’s elegant prose reflects perfectly the restraint of the age, and his obvious passion for the details … With Transformations, King has delivered a book that is at once thoughtful, entertaining, melancholy, and uplifting.”

The Globe and Mail

“King constructs a threefold mystery narrative — equal parts serial killer whodunit, art-world intrigue, and supernatural mystery — that raises questions about the relationship between reality and contrivance, life and art, the authentic and the illusory … The story is thematically intriguing, the mysteries are skillfully devised, and the historical details are convincingly drawn.”

Books in Canada

“Distilling vast references into a narrative of mixed styles — from sparse to rococo — King straddles a barely discernable line between fact and fiction … King’s spin on literary artistic and social pretensions is ambitious and intriguing.”

The Toronto Star