Jump to content

Strange Gift

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.
Strange Gift
AuthorAdelyn Bushnell
LanguageEnglish
PublisherCoward-McCann
Publication date
1951
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (hardcover)
Pages309

Strange Gift is a 1951 American supernatural romance novel. It was the fourth and final published novel by Adelyn Bushnell, who was primarily known for her work as a playwright and radio dramatist, before her death two years later.

Plot

Nancy Morse, a young woman who has gained fame as a psychic child prodigy, returns who her hometown of Kincassett, Maine, to settle her family's financial affairs. Despite growing up surrounded by religious and spiritualist charlatans, Nancy does indeed have psychic abilities, both aspects of her reputation that automatically put her at odds with the community.[1][2] The plot is further driven by a "vision of sudden death in the snow" that comes to Nancy around the same time some New York gangsters arrive in Kincassett.[3]

Response

Strange Gift receive positive reviews upon its release. The Los Angeles Daily News wrote that "Adelyn Bushnell tells her story with a simplicity and conviction that lends a remarkable degree of credibility."[4] Writing in the Raleigh News & Observer, reviewer Becky Summers described it as "best-seller stuff" and told the reader: "you will find that this story of a clairvoyant will hold you spellbound for its full 309 pages."[5] "Plot, characters, transitions are well handled," opined the Tulsa World, "and it all adds up to good reading without any strain on the mentality--unless you choose to take seriously the strange revelations and ponder their truth."[6]

Portland-based reviewer Harold L. Cail wrote that "Strange Gift will hold the interest, even if Nancy's clairvoyancy does become a little too pat at times," and described the ending as disappointing.[7] Ken Carnahan, writing in The Berkeley Daily Gazette, was even less kind to the book, calling it confusing and admonishing the author for being "so concerned with the lives and doing of some of the inhabitants of the small town of Kincassett, Maine, that she neglects the story possibilities of Nancy's gift until almost the end of the book."[8]

References

  1. ^ "Psychiatry And A Seer: Two Novels For The Heat." The Miami Herald Vol. 41 No. 217 p4-F. 8 July 1951. Accessed 25 September 2023.
  2. ^ Cail, Harold L. "A Maine Clairvoyant." Portland Sunday Telegram and Sunday Press Herald Vol. 65 No. 18 Magazine Section p2. 9 September 1951. Accessed 25 September 2023.
  3. ^ C.H.T. "Current Fiction: But Entertaining." Norfolk Virginian-Pilot Vol. CVCIV No. 64 Part 5 p2. 3 July 1951. Accessed 25 September 2023.
  4. ^ Hyers, Faith Holmes. "Heroine sees past and future." Los Angeles Daily News Vol. 54 No. 17640 p12. 28 July 1951. Accessed 25 September 2023.
  5. ^ Summers, Becky. "Madam Medium." The News & Observer Vol. CLXXIII, No. 141, pIV-5. 10 June 1951. Accessed 25 September 2023.
  6. ^ Smith, Lucy May. "Heroine Endowed With Psychic Gift." Tulsa World Vol. 46 No. 333 S5 p9
  7. ^ Cail, Harold L. "A Maine Clairvoyant." Portland Sunday Telegram and Sunday Press Herald Vol. 65 No. 18 Magazine Section p2. 9 September 1951. Accessed 25 September 2023.
  8. ^ Carnahan, Ken. "The Book Shelf." Berkeley Daily Gazette Vol. LXXV No. 243 p10. 10 October 1951. Accessed 25 September 2023.