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The Enchanted Isle (novel)

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Wikipedia article




'The Enchanted Isle' is a novel by James M. Cain published by The Mysterious Press in 1985.Skenazy, 1989 p. 188

Plot summary



The 16-year-old Amanda "Mandy" Vernick recounts the events of 'The Enchanted Isle' in this first-person narrative. Her self-image is centered on her physique, described by Mandy as "five foot two, 36-24-35, 105 pounds, blond hair, blue eyes" and figure she calls "extra good". She has endured her stepfather Steve Baker's physical and quasi-sexual abuse since puberty, with the tacit consent of her biological mother. She runs away when she discovers that her 30-year-old mother is having a secret affair with a wealthy man named Wilmer. She runs away to Baltimore in search of her biological father, with whom she hopes to bond and abscond to a remote tropical island, the "Enchanted Isle" of the book's title. En route to Baltimore, Mandy pairs up with Rick, like Mandy, a disaffected youth. When her "biological" father denies his paternity, she and Rick perpetrate a bank robbery. They escape, but Rick flees with the money and Mandy is compelled to return home. There, she discovers that Wilmer is in fact her biological father. In an act of vengeance, the young Rick guns down Steve and Mandy's mother, fulfilling Mandy's secret Electra complex.

Publication history



The manuscript for 'The Enchanted Isle' did not reach the desk of Knopf's editor William Koshland, as Cain's own literary agents, Dorothy Olding and Ivan van Auw, did not consider the work publishable. Cain began to wonder if he was "through as a novelist".Hoopes, 1982 p. 512, p. 528: For quote

Cain's Hollywood contact, Harold Norling Swanson, attempted to interest the movie studios in the novel. He changed the manuscript title to "The Mink Coat", emphasizing the topicality of a story dealing with "kids who run away from home these days". Hollywood showed no interest and the novel was never adapted to film.Hoopes, 1982 p. 512

'The Enchanted Isle' was published by The Mysterious Press in 1985, the last of his works to appear in print during his lifetime. His final novel, 'The Cocktail Waitress' (2012) was published posthumously.Hoopes, 1982 p. 537: Cocktail Waitress ...his last [novel] as it turned out...Connelly, 2012: Cocktail Waitress ...his very last book...

Critical assessment



Cain long-time friend and admirer Ruth Goetz at Knopf publishers, after reading a draft of 'The Enchanted Isle', exhorted Cain to "get back to those wonderfully seedy, lousy no-goods that you have always understood so wonderfully and written so superbly".Skenazy, 1989 p. 132Hoopes, 1982 p. 542-543: On friendship and admiration, See here for letter read at Cain's funeral written by Goetz. Literary critic Paul Skenazy comments on the misanthropy evident in Cain's 'The Enchanted Isle':

Footnotes



Sources



*Cain, James M. 1985. The Enchanted Isle. The Mysterious Press, New York.

*Hoopes, Roy. 1982. 'Cain.' Holt, Reinhart, and Winston. New York.

*Skenazy, Paul. 1989. James M. Cain. Continuum Publishing Company. New York.

Category:1985 novels

Category:Novels by James M. Cain

Category:Mysterious Press books

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