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Reviews > Contemporary Reviews for The Curse of the Wise Woman

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Upon the original release of The Curse Of The Wise Woman in 1933, there were some very notable authors writing reviews praising Lord Dunsany's new book. I stumbled across these recently when searching in some old newspapers. No spoilers ahead.

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Saturday Review of Literature, December 9th, 1933
Book critic and horror anthologist Basil Davenport

"This story shows Lord Dunsany at his best. His imagination, and his mellifluous prose, are to be found in it; but more than most of his books it keeps its feet upon earth. . . And this tale of a vanishing gentry and an unattainable paradise is told by an old man looking back, with tender desiderium, upon his youth; it is far away and long ago; it has the singular melancholy charm of something solid and yet hazy, like the woods in autumn."

Saturday Review of Literature, December 16th, 1933
World-renowned author, Graham Greene

"The lovely texture of the writing, the sense of strangeness which memory and a boy's imperfect comprehension lends, reminded me again and again of Alain Fournier. But the intrusion later in the novel of the supernatural, a growing prettiness and unreality in simile, prevent these memories of a past Ireland reaching the level of Le Grand Meaulnes."

The New York Times, 1933
Author unknown. It's a very lengthy review but so well-written I decided to share it. Although it contains no actual spoilers, I've hidden the plot because of its length.

"Sport and legend, beauty and nature and dark shadow of politics and the curses of the wise woman bringing the vengeance of the bog upon those who would destroy it are curiously mingled in this new romance by Lord Dunsany. Shining through it all, like the wonder of some fairy country glimpsed in the splendor of the sunset, is the loveliness of Tir-nan-Og, the Land of Youth, of apple blossoms that never fade and maidens whose beauty never wanes. Condemned by the church, which has declared that those who even let their thoughts dwell upon it too fondly are courting damnation, the charms of the Land of Youth lure some away, even from Heaven.

(view spoiler)

Besides many lovely descriptions, both of the countryside of the bog, the book gives a vivid picture of a certain phase of Irish life as it existed half a century or more ago. Kindliness and cruelty, poetry and fear and superstition, all have part in a tale which is a blending of love of the out-of-doors with love for that other fairy country, a land in some ways closely akin to that other strange Celtic wonderland, Annwyn. The accounts of Charles's various expeditions after game are too numerous and too long, but there is a great deal of beauty in the book, and specially in the visions it calls ip of that country built from the dreams of youth, which is the land of youth itself, Tir-nan-Og."

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