Alias Grace

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  • Genres: Jazz

Biography

Though most of the band's attention comes through an association with avant-garde English pop duo No-Man, Alias Grace, also a two-person outfit, stands well on its own merits as a lovely, hidden treasure of quiet, haunting music with folk, jazz, and pop leanings. Formed in Cambridge, England, in 1996, Alias Grace consists of Peter Chilvers, a multi-instrument player notable for his piano and guitar work in Samuel Smiles with No-Man's Tim Bowness, and Sandra O'Neill, an Irish-born singer with a simply enchanting, passionate voice. The two initially concentrated on performing rearrangements of favorite songs by other musicians in live performance, but by the time the first album, the striking Embers, appeared, Alias Grace had built up quite a strong repertoire of its own. The group's second and equally accomplished album, Storm Blue Evening, appeared in 2001 on Burning Shed, a new label set up by Bowness and Chilvers. ~ Ned Raggett, Rovi
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Alias Grace  
AliasGrace.jpg
1st edition cover
Author(s) Margaret Atwood
Cover artist Dante Gabriel Rossetti (painting), Kong (first edition design)
Country Canada
Language English
Genre(s) Historical fiction
Publisher McClelland & Stewart (first edition); Bloomsbury Publishing PLC (first U.K. edition)
Publication date September, 1996
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages 470 pp
ISBN ISBN 0-7710-0835-X (first edition); ISBN 0-7475-2787-3 (first U.K. edition)
OCLC Number 35936659

Alias Grace is a historical fiction novel by Canadian writer Margaret Atwood. First published in 1996 by McClelland & Stewart, it won the Canadian Giller Prize and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize.

The story is about the notorious 1843 murders of Thomas Kinnear and his housekeeper Nancy Montgomery in Upper Canada. Two servants of the Kinnear household, Grace Marks and James McDermott, were convicted of the crime. McDermott was hanged and Marks was sentenced to life imprisonment.

Although the novel is based on factual events, Atwood constructs a narrative with a fictional doctor, Simon Jordan, who researches the case. Although ostensibly conducting research into criminal behaviour, he slowly becomes personally involved in the story of Grace Marks and seeks to reconcile the mild mannered woman he sees with the murder of which she has been convicted.

Atwood also wrote an earlier work, the 1974 CBC Television film The Servant Girl, about Marks. However, in Alias Grace Atwood says that she has changed her opinion on the question of Marks' culpability.[citation needed]

The novel is written from various points of view, told mostly through the eyes of Grace Marks and her "alienist" doctor, Doctor Jordan (employing first and third person respectively). The shifting point of view makes the text appear disjointed and adds to the effect of uncertainty in the narrative. When written from Grace's point of view, the reader is never sure if Grace is speaking or thinking as Atwood refuses to use punctuation to indicate either.

The use of "could" is prevalent in Grace's point of view narrative, allowing us to wonder if she is making the story up, or if she is telling the truth.

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Samuel Smiles (Jazz Band, '90s)
He Wrote This (2001 Album by Peter Chilvers)
Winter Birds (2000 Album by Seely)
Margaret Eleanor Atwood (Canadian novelist & poet)
World of Bright Futures (2000 Album by Tim Bowness & Samuel Smiles)