Canadian Fiction, Historical Fiction
Julian the Magician
Gwendolyn MacEwen, Richard Almonte (Editor), Carol Wilson (Afterword), Marijke Friesen
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Overview
Set in a medival past that has overtones of the present day, the novel is about Julian, a young man who belives he is Christ.Synopsis
The Insomniac Library is proud to reissue Gwendolyn MacEwen's first novel, more than forty years after its original appearance in 1963. MacEwen described what she set out to achieve as a "sort of powerful poetic mad half-abandoned prose somewhere between [Kenneth] Patchen and Virginia Woolf." Set in a medieval past that has distinctly modern overtones, the novel is about Julian, a young man who believes he is Christ. Wandering the countryside in a horse-drawn wagon, Julian learns "to suspend logic like a whale on a thread." He becomes a master of alchemy, performing 'miracles' like curing the mad and changing water into wine. When his rapt audiences begins to lose faith, Julian must pay with his life. MacEwen skilfully implies a relationship between alchemy, miracles and belief, and the art forms she is engaged in herself, poetry and prose. What is the price the writer-magician must pay to engender belief in her audience? Is something true merely because we believe in it? The book includes an Afterword by the author's sister.Book Details
Published
March 1, 2004
Publisher
Insomniac Press
Pages
176
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781894663571