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7 Reviews
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
an elegant, intimate scrapbook,
By
This review is from: The Wilde Album (Hardcover)
This elegant little book is the first book about Oscar Wilde that I read and the one that made me fall in love with him. It's filled with beautiful pictures, some of which I haven't seen in other books. Besides the usual public pictures of Oscar, there are photos of personal objects like his wife Constance's wedding ring, letters and pages of manuscript, some in French, that show glimpses of the privet man behind the epigrams. There is enough biographical information to put the pictures in context; I knew very little about Oscar when I first read it and found everything to be quite clear. If you already have Vyvyan Holland's biography of Oscar (which would fit very nicely with this book, filling out the biographical information, as would Richard Ellmann's biography), there are more than enough pictures in this book that are not in Vyvyan Holland's book to make it worth adding to your library.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Indispensible,
This review is from: The Wilde Album (Hardcover)
Aside from the books Wilde actually wrote, this is the one book that should be on the shelf of everyone who loves Oscar. While its biographical story adds nothing new to the facts, the author's palpable sympathy for his grandfather is a welcome change from the cold and critical standard set by most critics of this pivotal genius and the wreckage of his life. More importantly, this small volume, which you can carry in a pocket, constitutes the largest single repository of Wilde memorabilia. Holland begins by lamenting the dissolution and loss of Wilde's scrapbooks and albums in the debtor sale of the author's entire household. By the end of his story his family's loss has taken on its true proportions as a loss to the rightful inheritance of all humankind.
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
"...walks between passion and poetry...",
By "acominatus" (Johnson City, TN United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Wilde Album (Hardcover)
This volume is more touching and insightful than mostworks about Oscar Wilde tend to be. It is filled with the narrative commentary of Wilde's grandson, Merlin Holland, who gives honest opinions as well as factual detail about the various stages of Oscar Wilde's life. The treasures, however, are the multitudes of photographs, memorabilia, and paintings that are included -- as well as drawings, satirical cartoons (mostly lampooning Oscar, both at Oxford and later in life), and wonderful notations under the items. The most interesting photographs, for me, are the ones which were done by Napoleon Sarony. They seem to touch a more thoughtful, poetic, dreamy Oscar, rather than the posing bon vivant or the deliberately provocative aesthete/decadent. The volume does well to have one of those photos on the cover, as well as having a different photo beside the title page. The grotesque photos, that almost make one cringe, though, are of Oscar in a skirted Greek national costume (with boots!) from April 1877; Oscar in a checkered suit and bowler hat at Oxford in 1878, and Oscar at age 2 in a blue velvet dress, a daguerreotype which has been color tinted. The weirdest photos are of the "blond tiger/panther" Lord Alfred Douglas, would-be "friend" and lover of Oscar. His eyes look vacant, haunted, cold in most of the photos , except for the one on page 147, in which he looks touchingly sensitive and lonely...the caption below the picture says it all: "Douglas aged 23. 'Your slim gilt soul walks between passion and poetry. I know Hyacinthus, whom Apollo loved so madly, was you in Greek days,' Wilde wrote to him around that time." Truly a remarkable album of memories.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Marvelous little book,
By I. Martinez-Ybor "Ignacio Martínez-Ybor" (Miami, FL USA) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Wilde Album (Hardcover)
Cutting to the chase, the real prize in this marvelous little book are the photographs. For once, we get something other than the usual lot that appear in books with a Wilde connection. Mr. Holland has achieved through his pictures (most seem to be from the family collection) something which most texts don't do..... a feel for the whole of Wilde the man. There is a human dimension to this slim volume that one does not find elsewhere. There are pictures of ancestors, parents, editorial cartoons, advertisements, all in relatively strict chronological order, from the child in a dress (as was customary for little boys in the period) to the student, the developing fop, the lampooned character, the ludicrous pairing with Bosie... who looks perpetually bored and thoroughly uninteresting... to the depressing denouement, death bed and funerary monuments. The text reveals nothing new but it is elegantly written. Both of Wilde's children were devoted to the memory of their father. It is evident that the grandson was raised in like manner. Of Wilde's two boys, Cyril died in WWI without issue. Mr. Holland is the grandson of the other, Vyvyan. If you are interested in the period, England and Ireland in late 19th century, Wilde, gay history, etc. buy this book. It is worth infinitely more than it costs.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Little Gem for Folks Wild for Wilde,
By "scarlett404" (Athens, Georgia United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Wilde Album (Hardcover)
This is a sparkling gem for all fans of Oscar Wilde. It is a brilliant retelling of Oscar's life through pictures. Filled with everything from photographs of Wilde the aesthete to hilarious caricatures of him from Punch magazine to some of Wilde's own drawings and notes, this fabulous little book has it all. Many of the items I have not seen in any other volume. It goes wonderfully well coupled with Richard Ellman's gorgeous biography or it stands tall on its own. All and all, a marvelous book that I cannot possibly recommend highly enough.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
QUITE TOO UTTERLY ECSTATIC!!!!!,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Wilde Album (Hardcover)
What a Gem! If you are a fan of Oscar Wilde then this book is indispensable.
My only gripe is that it is too small. A larger format would have shown off the many Napoleon Sarony photos (the largest collection in one publication) If the publisher and Mr Holland ever read this....I'd gladly shell out for a large format edition. Other than that, I'm quite too utterly ecstatic about the book.......WELL DONE!
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Mr. Wilde's grandson strives to recreate his family heritage,
By
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This review is from: The Wilde Album (Hardcover)
Mr. Oscar Wilde, the toast of all London for his successful plays revealing the immoral soft underbelly of the British aristocracy, received a slanderous calling card at his club from the Marquess of Queensberry, whose son Al was assisting Mr. Wilde in his investigations of the more corrupt and immoral and hypocritical aspects of those filthily wealthy imperialists.
At Al's urgent request, Mr. Wilde filed suit for slander against Al's own father, serving as noted in this book in Mr. Wilde's own words, as the dice in a cruel and callous oedipal gamble between father and son. Mr. Wilde lost; the petit bourgeois father won and before the Crown brought charges against Mr. WIlde under a new immoral activities act, the father had Mr. Wilde's home ramsacked and auctioned, all of Mr. Wilde's treasured and expensive belongings, and those of his wife and two small sons, in order ostensibly to cover his own legal costs in defending himself against Mr. Wilde's charge of slander. The auction, staged as it was, brought only a very small percentage of its actual worth, yet destroyed all that the family owned. Mr. Wilde's grandson, in gathering this present album, mentions the fact of this destruction of his family heritage by alluding to the registry of six family albums which were sold and discarded beyond any recovery. Merlin mentions this fact cold, without further comment, but the skilled reader may read between the lines the deep and painful import of this action to Merlin personally. Thus this present effort grows immeasurably poignant and important. Though others praise the photographs here, it is the comprehensive and extensive and brilliant essay by Merlin here which makes this book as well. This book grows thereby essential for any reader of the English language, and for any reader of Irish resistance to English colonialist power, in particular that fatal power which was so coldly brought to bear against its most subtle and charming and astute and eloquent and Irish critic, greater even than GB Shaw, more subtle even than the great Mr. James Joyce. Never mind please my ramblings nor the effusiveness of other reviews which here appear upon this page. My one qualm regarding this book is that it is not BIG enough! Please see as well the excellent, if painfully abridged, production of An Ideal Husband in the BBC collection The Oscar Wilde Collection (The Importance of Being Earnest / The Picture of Dorian Gray / An Ideal Husband / Lady Windermere's Fan) if only to see younger and slimmer and in his prime he who would later play for them Sherlock Holmes. The Importance . . .in this collection is also tolerable if abridged and awkward; Lady Windermere's Fan begins slow with the mournful Lord, but grows inexorably to a heart wrenching finale without sentimentality. Read all of Mr. Wilde's published work (lacking of course the bulk his writings for Women's World, and lacking his original French text of Salome) in Complete Works of Oscar Wilde (Collins Classics). The original French text of Salome you may find at Salome: Drame en un acte (Collected Works of Oscar Wilde) in order to perform your own translation into English which will undoubtedly replace Al's. It is also available in a Spanish translation at Salome - Bajo El Monte and a fine selection of his short stories at El Fantasma de Canterville y Otros Cuentos (Serie Roja Alfaguara) (Serie Roja Alfaguara). Please read this book and know the extent of the destructive power of an offended British aristocracy, a destiny, as Merlin here indicates, as inexorable as any ancient Greek drama. Merlin's assessments of his grandfather's oeuvre are also excellent and right on, although too brief! Find further critical work by himself as well as by his father Vyvyan Holland, whose photographs as a small boy are so telling here. |
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The Wilde Album by Merlin Holland (Hardcover - April 15, 1998)
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