Gilligan's Wake Explained

Gilligan's Wake is a 2003 novel, loosely based on the 1960s CBS sitcom Gilligan's Island, written by Esquire film and television critic Tom Carson.The title is derived from the title of the TV show and Finnegans Wake, the final work of Irish novelist James Joyce. The novel was published subsequently as a paperback in 2004 .

Carson's text contains several deviations from the TV series' established canon, including the rank of Quinton McHale (Lieutenant Commander of his PT boat, rather than Captain as in the book); Ginger Grant being born in a fictional small town in Alabama (rather than New York City as depicted in the show); and the surname and birthplace of Mary Ann Summers. Whether these were errors of research or deliberate changes on Carson's part is unclear.

Plot summary

Each of the seven castaways narrate an autobiographical story—almost totally unrelated to the events of the show—in order of their mention in the show's title theme. Their stories intersect with a character named John Gilbert "Jack" Egan, a Marine-turned-CIA operative, whose own life is the meta-narrative which ties the novel together. Each chapter features an important person or object in the lives of the castaways whose name is an anagram of "Gilligan"; additionally, a character whose name is a variant of "Susan" and Maxwell House coffee appears or is referred to in each story.

Chapters

Critical reaction

Publishers Weekly gave the novel a "starred" (favorable) review,[1] while The New York Times considered it "not as good as Finnegans Wake, but (...) better than Gilligan's Island."[2]

References

. Gilligan's Wake . Tom Carson (writer) . Picador . USA . 1st (hardback) . January 2003 . 0-312-29123-X . registration .

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Fiction Review: GILLIGAN'S WAKE by Tom Carson . Publishersweekly.com . 2012-08-03.
  2. https://www.nytimes.com/2003/01/26/books/the-minnow-found-again.html The Minnow Found Again