Iolani; or, Tahiti as It Was

iolani; or, tahiti as it was

more information about Iolani; or, Tahiti as It Was

Iolani; or, Tahiti as It Was

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Wilkie Collins, whom many consider the originator of the modern detective story in novels such as The Moonstone and The Woman in White, wrote this novel when he was 19 and fired up with dreams of far-off places and heroic derring-do. Set in Polynesia in the days before European colonization, Iolani is filled with beautiful and long-suffering dusky-skinned women (with European features and heaving bosoms), wicked high priests, and even wild-eyed wild men from the forest. There are pitched battles between tribes, horrid pagan rituals, and plenty of damsels in distress, all played out against an exotic, tropical background of white beaches and swaying palm trees. In short, this is exactly the kind of overwrought romance one might expect from an imaginative young man with literary longings. Iolani, the title character, is the villain of the piece; shortly after his wife, Idia, gives birth to a son, he decides that in keeping with the religious practices of their tribe, the child must be put to death. Idia objects and ends up fleeing with the newborn and a beautiful young friend to seek protection from another tribe. Much melodrama ensues as Collins tries to fit the sensational conventions of the gothic potboiler popularized by writers such as Horace Walpole and Ann Radcliffe into a South Seas setting.

Never published during its author's lifetime, this is a novel that probably only Collins scholars could love. But even in the overheated prose and patently second- and third-hand descriptions of exotic locales, one can detect the seeds of his later, more successful works. Certainly Collins's fascination with sensational plots is evident here, but so is his radical (for the time) depiction of strong and unconventional women. Read Iolani for its historical interest; then take a look at The Moonstone to see how well Wilkie Collins grew up. --Margaret Prior

The New York Times Book Review, James R. Kincaid
In its time, it was read, I guess, only by Collins and a couple of publisher's advisers, who detested it. ("Hopelessly bad," one concluded.)

Iolani; or, Tahiti as It Was

Iolani; or, Tahiti as It Was,Wilkie Collins,Ira Bruce Nadel,Princeton University Press,069103446X,Action & Adventure,Classics,Collins, Wilkie, 1824-1889,Fiction,French Polynesia,Literature - Classics / Criticism,Psychological fiction,Religious life and customs,Romance - General,Tahiti,Women

Books Info:

  1. Jane Austen and the Fiction of her Time
  2. Japan's First Modern Novel: Ukigumo of Futabatei Shimei (Michigan Classics in Japanese Studies)
  3. Key Concepts in Literary Theory
  4. Life of Nelson (Classics of Naval Literature)
  5. Literature: A Contemporary Introduction
  6. Literature of the Western World: Neoclassicism Through the Modern Period, Vol. II
  7. Los Tres Mosqueteros
  8. Magic & Madness in the Library : Protagonists Among the Stacks
  9. Mahabharata: The Forest (Clay Sanskrit Library)
  10. Martin Fierro (Clasicos seleccion series)

Books Info

Books Info

Recommended Books

  1. Peter Blake About Collage
  2. Perspectives on Investment Management of Public Pension Funds
  3. Acting in Television Commercials for Fun and Profit
  4. According To Kotler: The World's Foremost Authority On Marketing Answers Your Questions
  5. Agronomic Handbook: Management of Crops, Soils and Their Fertility
  6. Adenoviruses:Model and Vectors in Virus Host Interactions : Virion and Structure, Viral Replication,
  7. Algebraic Curves over Finite Fields : Error-Correcting Codes and Exponential Sums
  8. A Christmas Carol and Other Stories
  9. Aria Volume 2: The Soulmarket
  10. Anthony Dias Blue's Pocket Guide to Wine 2006
  11. 50 State Quarters Collector's Folder : 1999-2008 Denver & Philadelphia Mints
  12. 50 Ways Women Can Prevent Heart Disease
  13. A History of Elizabethan Literature
  14. A Key to the Woody Plants of the New Jersey Pine Barrens
  15. 500 Key Words for the SAT, and How to Remember Them Forever!