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Electric Spark
The Enigma of Muriel Spark - Shortlisted for the Baillie Gifford Prize 2025
Electric Spark
The Enigma of Muriel Spark - Shortlisted for the Baillie Gifford Prize 2025
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Description
'Absolutely mesmerising. I was possessed by this book in the same way that I suspect its author was possessed by Spark. It still hasn't put me down' Spectator
'Unputdownable' Financial Times
'Joyously, brilliantly intelligent. In Wilson, Spark has met her true match' Anne Enright
From one of our leading biographers and critics comes an exhilarating, landmark new look at Muriel Spark.
The word most commonly used to describe Muriel Spark is 'puzzling'. Spark was a puzzle, and so too are her books. She dealt in word games, tricks, and ciphers; her life was composed of weird accidents, strange coincidences and spooky events. Evelyn Waugh thought she was a saint, Bernard Levin said she was a witch, and she described herself as 'Muriel the Marvel with her X-ray eyes'. Following the clues, riddles, and instructions Spark planted for posterity in her biographies, fiction, autobiography and archives, Frances Wilson aims to crack her code.
Electric Spark explores not the celebrated Dame Muriel but the apprentice mage discovering her powers. We return to her early years when everything was piled on: divorce, madness, murder, espionage, poverty, skulduggery, blackmail, love affairs, revenge, and a major religious conversion. If this sounds like a novel by Muriel Spark it is because the experiences of the 1940s and 1950s became, alchemically reduced, the material of her art.
Product details
| Published | 05 Jun 2025 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Extent | 432 |
| ISBN | 9781526663085 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Publishing |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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A revolutionary book. When Spark published her first novel, The Comforters, in 1957, it was recognised as unique – something that quite simply had never been done before. Wilson's achievement in Electric Spark is equally remarkable: an entirely original method of life writing which leaves conventional biographical techniques gasping in the dust . . . Electric Spark heaves with ghosts and furies, burglaries and blackmail. It is disquieting and absolutely mesmerising. I was possessed by this book in the same way that I suspect its author was possessed by Spark. It still hasn't put me down
Lisa Hilton, Spectator
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Wilson is not any old biographer. Her books are intense, eclectic and wildly diversionary, her intelligence rising from their pages like steam – and in Spark, the cleverest and the weirdest of them all, she may have found her ultimate subject
Rachel Cooke, Observer
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I raced through Frances Wilson's whip-smart Electric Spark
Ali Smith, Guardian
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Electric Spark is a darting, innovative example of the form – perhaps more Ouija board than book . . . [Wilson's] own surveillance is through a magnifying glass and her book is a fire-starter
Alexandra Jacobs, New York Times
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Biography, then – which Frances Wilson attempts in this beautifully written book – is the closest readers can get to Spark . . . "Sparkian" has not entered common parlance but, by the time you finish this brilliant book, you think it probably should
Economist
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So original and engaging . . . The result of this blend of existing sources and fresh archival finds is an unputdownable and “electric” perspective on the extraordinary talent and life that together forged Spark's fiction . . . A fabulous achievement, in more than one sense
Isabel Berwick, Financial Times
























