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The Cunning Man by Robertson Davies
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The Cunning Man (original 1994; edition 1996)

by Robertson Davies

Series: Unfinished Trilogy (2)

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1,5632911,414 (3.87)1 / 48
This novel tells the story of the cunning man, from boyhood to old age, who is a doctor but also possibly a shaman. In it the author explores religion, psychosymatic illness, love and death.
Member:mmhorman
Title:The Cunning Man
Authors:Robertson Davies
Info:Penguin Books Ltd (1996), Paperback, 480 pages
Collections:Your library
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The Cunning Man by Robertson Davies (1994)

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» See also 48 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 29 (next | show all)
Here's what I wrote in 2008 about this read: "Novel of Toronto as it modenized past it English roots and began to be the highly diverse city it is today. "Cunning Man" was a physican. (NOTE: Check on the online reviews; different take than MGA's, but I stand by my key memory of Toronto in transition.)" ( )
  MGADMJK | Oct 29, 2022 |
The entire story is framed as a newspaper interview that causes the elderly narrator, Dr. Jon Hullah, to remember his life through anecdotes and philosophical discussion much of it told in a gossipy tone. He delved into many topics: church, war, sex, family, medicine, even a joke told to him by an acquaintance that he recognized as a retelling of a Rabelais story. He lost my interest in a few spots, but was otherwise fascinating. This is a terrific accomplishment for Davies that came to be his unplanned last hurrah. ( )
  VivienneR | Aug 3, 2022 |
We're in classic Robertson Davies country here, middle-class Toronto between the 1920s and the 1980s, with a cast of actors, musicians, artists, journalists and High Anglican priests and a mock-Trollope plot involving an Archdeacon at war with a parish that has been overdoing the bells-and-smells. In the middle of it all is our narrator Jonathan Hullah, a physician who believes — as I suspect most physicians do — that he has far better insight than his colleagues into his patients' problems. He attributes this superior ability partly to his reading of The anatomy of melancholy and partly to a childhood encounter with a Native-American healer and some snakes.

As we would expect, there's a strong whiff of Faustian bargains and black magic hanging around in the background, whilst the foreground story is full of people who start out with great promise and ambitious plans and end up in Canadian mediocrity, carving statues of the Queen Mother out of Ontario Creamery Butter. Hullah, of course, learns the limitations of his medical cunning. I don't think Davies can have been very happy when he wrote this, but there's a lot of fine sardonic humour here for the reader to enjoy, all the same. ( )
1 vote thorold | Jul 4, 2022 |
I am disappointed with Davies's last novel, The Cunning Man" from 1994 and the second novel of his unfinished "Toronto Trilogy". His second trilogy, from the early 1970's, the "Deptford Trilogy", with "Fifth Business", "The Manticore" and "World of Wonders" comprises three near-masterpieces and whopping good reads which should be on anyone's list. I was hoping for more here. Instead we have a novel of minimal general interest about older people, reminding this reader of Joseph Heller's followup to "Catch-22" the unlamented but undervalued "Something Happened", again about older people and showing diminished writing mastery. I did rather enjoy some time ago "Murther and Walking Spirits", Davies's first novel of the Toronto Trilogy.

Readers who might find this novel of interest are not old people, of whom I am one, but rather Canadians, especially those from Ontario, where the action takes place, and perhaps also readers of about 22 years who begin to be curious about the way life may look to an intelligent and observant (and frank) guy of about thrice that age, namely the physician of fairly unconventional methods who is the first-person main character.

Do read the Deptford trilogy. ( )
  KENNERLYDAN | Jul 11, 2021 |
A very thoughtful reflection on what it means to be a healer. ( )
  Neil_Luvs_Books | Apr 6, 2021 |
Showing 1-5 of 29 (next | show all)
"This is a wise, humane and consistently entertaining novel. Robertson Davies's skill and curiosity are as agile as ever, and his store of incidental knowledge is a constant pleasure. Long may he continue to divert us."
 

» Add other authors (2 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Robertson Daviesprimary authorall editionscalculated
BascoveCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed

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Epigraph
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 mischief's, as Plato proves, proceed from the soul: and if the mind be not first satisfied, the body can never be cured.


Robert Burton The Anatomy of Melancholy (1621)
Dedication
For Brenda, and our daughters Miranda, Jennifer and Rosamond
First words
Should I have taken the false teeth?
Quotations
In my experience snobbery sometimes means no more than a rejection of what is truly inferior, and if mankind had never been fastidious I do not suppose that haute cuisine would ever have displaced hunks of meat parched over a smoky fire.
My great book I had decided to call The Anatomy of Fiction ... It would, of course, be a work of extrapolation, working from the known, as given by the author about an imaginary (but not therefore unreal) character, to well-researched and intelligently guessed-at elements which the author was probably aware of but which the conventions of his time did not permit him to describe. As a doctor, I could not conceive that he might have chosen to omit such details from reasons of literary choice; surely the health, physical state, and living conditions of his characters would be of absorbing interest to him? ... A commentary, a sort of footnote to that part of the Divine Drama in which Fiction has a place.
Why did Micawber lose his hair? Want of kerotin? ... What did Jane Eyre, as a governess in a gentleman's house, get to eat? ... What conclusions can we draw about the menstrual cycle of Emma Bovary? How did Nana avoid having babies? ... Only a partial estimate can be made of the quality of a life unless we know something about the defecatory habits of the patient. ... What was the condition of Miss Havisham's bowels, sitting all day in a wheelchair as she did? Intestinal stasis can have a profound influence on the personality. ... many women in fiction spent a great part of their life on sofas. Why? What ailed them? ... To deal with the Boozer in Lit. would mean that I should have to embark on a work of many volumes.... What do people die of, in fiction? Children frequently ... have no clear symptoms, and seem to die of Ingrowing Virtue. Would it be possible to define in broad medical terms something that could be called Heroine's Disease ...?"
Because of that duplicitous little miss Ellen Ternan, Dickens managed to make an astonishing number of people other than himself miserable, and unlike Ibsen or Trollope [who also fell for much younger women] he wanted a physical fulfilment of his daft passion. Whether he got it or not remains a mystery; photographs of Miss Ternan do not suggest a passionate or even a normally warm nature.
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This novel tells the story of the cunning man, from boyhood to old age, who is a doctor but also possibly a shaman. In it the author explores religion, psychosymatic illness, love and death.

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