"Gyles Brandreth’s Oscar Wilde Murder Mysteries (2007-): When Myth Becomes His-Story"
Joris, Kirby
(2009) Postgraduate Biography Conference: History, Mystery & Myth — Location: University of East Anglia, Norwich (UK) (14.November.2009)
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Joris, KirbyUCLouvain
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Abstract
Within the recent trend of fictionalizing the life of writers, Gyles Brandreth’s Oscar Wilde Murder Mysteries (2007-) prevail as the most innovative. A real work in progress (with three novels published so far and six more to come), this series, taking Oscar Wilde as its sleuth, is a genuine historical game of finding out the truth (in a Sherlock Holmes fashion) not only about murders but – implicitly, progressively and more significantly – about Oscar Wilde himself. Conscious that truth about any human being – let alone a figure from the past – can only be elusive, Brandreth’s novels each exhibit various facets of the historico-mythical Wilde that cannot legitimately appear in any factual biography. This paper will show how these novels – in which “almost all” of the story is true (G. Brandreth, ‘Acknowledgements,’ in Oscar Wilde and the Dead Man’s Smile, 2009, p. 363) – make the reader not only glimpse at the real-life Oscar Wilde, but conjointly at his ultimate enigma. Peppered with self reflexive implications about make-believe, myth and character, the Oscar Wilde Murder Mysteries are not, as this paper will examine, so much compelling because they/there are mysteries as because we need and ‘miss stories’ about those biographical subjects who made up history and, incidentally, their own story.
Joris, K. (2009). “Gyles Brandreth’s Oscar Wilde Murder Mysteries (2007-): When Myth Becomes His-Story”. Postgraduate Biography Conference: History, Mystery & Myth, University of East Anglia, Norwich (UK). https://hdl.handle.net/2078.5/159736