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Golden Ghouls


Article # : 18375 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 9 / 1990  2,763 Words
Author : Robert F. Geary
Robert F. Geary is head of the English Department at James Madison University. His academic interests include the gothic novel and its literary descendants.

       A BED BY THE WINDOW
       A Novel of Mystery and Redemption
       M. Scott Peck
       Bantam Books
       306 pp., $18.95
       
        “That's one of the troubles with people,” Georgia continued… “They think of us patients in a nursing home as people who are already dead. They don't think of us as having real lives. They don't even think of us as being capable committing murder.”
       
        Lieutenant Petri sat back thoughtfully. He had gotten used to the fact that when he had come into Willow Glen [nursing home] he had wandered into a territory quite foreign to him. Now it was also beginning to dawn on him that he had wandered into it with a lot of preconceptions.
       
        Readers of A Bed by the Window may feel much the same way. Not only does the novel take us into the unusual setting of a nursing home, a place we may dread even to think on, it also upsets our own preconceptions about far more than the world of the old and infirm. On a surface level, the novel is a mystery, and an exciting one at that, centering on the murder of a hideously deformed and completely paralyzed genius, Stephen Solaris, a man gifted with insight into the hearts of those who come in contact with him. The nursing home setting, however, is but the stage for the exploration of more profound and complex mysteries than the identity of the killer. It is a place where death is always close; and the proximity of death, as Dr. Samuel Johnson once said, can concentrate the mind. Or, as Willow Glen's chief administrator Edith ... (1991 of 16518 Characters)
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