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Cunning Man
  

Cunning Man (Paperback)

de Robertson Davies (Author)
3.9étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (13 évaluations de client)

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From Publishers Weekly

Admirers of Davies who may have felt somewhat of a falling off in his last two books can be reassured: The Cunning Man is a superb return to the high form of the Deptford trilogy and What's Bred in the Bone. It's a novel in which Davies' clear-sighted humanism, irony and grasp of character are on vivid display. The hero, Dr. Jonathan Hullah, is a Toronto doctor of decidedly unorthodox opinions and practice who regales the reader with an account of his family and educational history, and his relationships with a group that includes a noble priest who dies mysteriously at the altar, a far-from-noble one who quite justifiably declines into drink and despair, an untidy Scottish journalist who is a splendid foil to Hullah, and a lesbian couple who offer the provincial Canadian city the equivalent of a Parisian salon on the basis of cucumber sandwiches and cream cakes. Everything revolves around a church much more Roman, in its rituals and music, than it should be; an apparent miracle; and a nosy woman reporter. Davies's command of both his material and his elegant first-person narration is absolute. He achieves a remarkable sense of uncloying elegy in his vision of a group of people who are far more complicated than they appear, yet always utterly believable. To call a book the work of an infinitely civilized mind might seem starchy; to add that it is also wonderfully funny, poignant and never less than totally engrossing should redress the balance.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc. --Ce texte provient de la Hardcover édition.


From Library Journal

It is always a pleasure to read works that manage to be both entertaining and intelligent. Throughout his long career, Canadian novelist Davies (e.g., What's Bred in the Bone, LJ 11/15/85) has successfully combined these two elements. His latest protagonist, Dr. Jonathan Hullah, is a holistic physician-a cunning diagnostician who is often able to get to the root of problems that have baffled others. A young reporter's query about the circumstances surrounding an Episcopalian priest's death at the high altar on Good Friday leads the doctor to reflect on his own life and career. While the issues addressed are those that have long preoccupied Davies-the nature of friendship, religion, faith, and artistic life-the approach is anything but pompous and dry. Davies's characterizations are rich (and just a bit quirky) and his commentary filled with humor (e.g., deconstructionism "comes from France, as so many brilliant and short lived notions do"). One of those rare novels that can be wholeheartedly recommended for libraries of every type and size, including high schools.
--David W. Henderson, Eckerd Coll. Lib., St. Petersburg, Fla.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc. --Ce texte provient de la Hardcover édition.

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L'avis des consommateurs

13 évaluations
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3.9étoiles sur 5 (13 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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4.0étoiles sur 5 Canada dry mock, Jui 4 2001
This is my first encounter with Robertson Davies. I had never heard of him, and would not have read him if he weren't noted in the reader's list of the Modern Library's top 100 novels. And how unfortunate it would have been had I not picked up this book!

The Cunning Man is an examination of the life of a doctor, told by himself. Asked to recall the story of the strange death of Father Ninian Hobbes which he witnessed, he recounts his past; his childhood, his schooling, the work of his profession, the influences that have made him who he is. In doing so, he shares with us his observations on the nature of life, love, art, illness, friendship, and many other things. Davies lets us have a picture of life, complete with accomplishments and disappointments, dreams and dreams undone, and makes it real and interesting and intelligent. I can understand the appeal he has for his fans and I will be reading more of Davies' books soon.

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5.0étoiles sur 5 An Unusual Yarn Well Told, Mars 8 2001
Par David Graham (Shell, Ecuador) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(REAL NAME)   
Robertson Davies remains far and away my favorite novelist. After reading this book, I was sorry that he was no longer around to continue putting out such entertaining work. Some people, even otherwise enthusiastic Davies fans, don't care much for this book. As a physician, perhaps this biased me in the book's favor, but I thought this the most enjoyable book I read in 2000. I've read all of Davies novels and would rank this high among them. The story never sagged, the characters were of the usual fascinating Davies' variety, and his humor had me laughing aloud again and again.

Davies' narrator is Dr. Jonathan Hullah, a physician of unusual diagnostic skills and adroit healing powers. He is known as the cunning man, a term hearkening back to English village life in which a sort of village know-all could do a little of everything, from setting broken bones to doctoring horses. He was the wizard of folk tradition, the cunning man. The Cunning Man is Dr. Hullah's fascinating reminiscence of life, from boyhood apprenticeship with an old Indian healer to his service in the medical corps during World War II, then on to his unusual medical practice (which included such orthodox measures as having his patients strip off their clothes and lay on an exam table while he sniffed them.) Hullah narrates this while at the same time conducting a search into the mysterious death of his parish priest while saying mass. This combination memoir/mystery novel was, as I said earlier, the most pleasurable book I read in 2000. If the chief end of a novel is entertainment, then this book succeeded admirably.

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4.0étoiles sur 5 good for what ails you., Déc 19 2000
Par Cipriano "www.bookpuddle.blogspot.com" (Planet Claire) - Voir tous mes commentaires
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
Davies once commented that he knew "nothing about medicine" but had the highest degree of "hypochondriachal curiosity about it that is characteristic of authors." (source: his 1984 lecture entitled Can A Doctor Be A Humanist?). Here in his final novel, Davies seems to have given vent to his curiosity in the creation of the character Jonathan Hullah... an unconventional physician who gains a reputation through his intuitive (albeit successful) diagnostic techniques. For the eccentric Hullah, observation of, conversation with, and even "sniffing" of the patient brings him closer to an accurate prognosis than ever would an impersonal reading of a medical chart. Central to this holistic approach to medicine is Hullah's appreciation of not only the physical/biological aspects of man's nature, but also the mental and spiritual, and because of this understanding, he becomes known as the Cunning Man. It is a term borrowed from Robert Burton's "The Anatomy Of Melancholy" in a passage that appears on Davies' title page: "Cunning men, wizards, and white witches, as they call them, in every village, which, if they be sought unto, will help almost all infirmities of body and mind... The body's mischiefs, as Plato proves, proceed from the soul: and if the mind be not first satisfied, the body can never be cured."

Through all of the great doctor's associations (as all the while, it applies also to himself) we find this theme played out... that to be truly healthy one must pay attention to MORE than merely the physical machine.

I enjoyed this story, but I agree with several other reviewers that this is not Davies' finest book. It does not have quite the plot-strength of any of his other ten novels, but true Davies devotees will not dismantle their bearded statues over this. To the not-already worshipful, I encourage you that reading ANY Davies is better than to have not read him at all.

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Commentaires client les plus récents

4.0étoiles sur 5 Interesting but not his best
Robertson Davies was a Canadian author, arguably the finest Canadian writer ever, who wrote plays and novels on generally Canadian subjects. Read more
Publié le Aoû 9 2000 par Richard R. Horton

2.0étoiles sur 5 He saved his worst for last
Robertson Davies- maybe Canada's all time best novelist; playright, actor, producer, journalist, director, professor, historian, cultural elitist, mystical eccentric, stylistic... Read more
Publié le Aoû 5 2000 par L. Peyronnin

5.0étoiles sur 5 The ONLY contemporary novelist not to be missed
I just recently and quite by accident stumbled on the marvelous Robertson Davies and have just rushed through two of his trilogies and The Cunning Man and am halfway through the... Read more
Publié le Juil 18 2000 par jisom2

2.0étoiles sur 5 It has some merits...
A poor book by a renowned author. It struck me as a well written but shallow book, full of sometimes self-mocking but otherwise ever-present snobbery of the sort one would expect... Read more
Publié le Jui 30 2000 par Kestutis

5.0étoiles sur 5 A funny, humane book
The Cunning Man is, frequently, a hilarious book. But it is more than that as well. By following the life and observations of an unconventional doctor from the backwoods of... Read more
Publié le Janv. 12 2000 par V. Wilson

1.0étoiles sur 5 Disappointing Read from My Favorite Author
I've read everything Robertson Davies ever wrote. He's my favorite author and I especially love his trilogies. However, this one was slow and boring. I didn't even finish it. Read more
Publié le Janv. 7 2000

5.0étoiles sur 5 Cunning and wise novel
I have read all Robertson Davies' novels, including this his last and pity everyone who hasn't discovered him yet. Read more
Publié le Janv. 27 1999

5.0étoiles sur 5 Saving the best for last.
Robertson Davies has been an author who has always seemed to have been "my own." Most of the people I know have never heard of him -- and that's a great loss for... Read more
Publié le Aoû 23 1998 par tha@wwnet.com

5.0étoiles sur 5 a precise definite tour de force from start to finish
Davies creates the types of Characters who have a firm head on their shoulders but still belong somewhere on the throne of Olympus. Read more
Publié le Avril 30 1998 par khank@rcsn.nb.ca

4.0étoiles sur 5 Charming retrospective and idea free-for-all
Robertson Davies was an old man, (who looked quite a bit like George Bernard Shaw) when he wrote this book and he tossed into it a vast variety of vignettes, stories, opinions and... Read more
Publié le Avril 23 1997

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