
He applied "the Page 99 Test" to his new book, The Importance of Being Different: Disability in Oscar Wilde’s Fairy Tales, with the following results:
The Good Soldier is one of my all-time favorite novels, so I was really hoping to be able to fall in with Ford on this, but in general I would have to say that the Test does not work particularly well with my book. My page 99 is the second page in the fourth and final content chapter, which offers a close reading of Wilde’s famous fairy tale “The Happy Prince.” This page consists primarily of the chapter’s second paragraph (framed by the last 7 ½ lines of the opening paragraph and the first 4 lines of the third paragraph). This 24 ½-line paragraph exclusively serves as a summary of a critical essay written by Julia Miele Rodas on the character of Bertha Plummer from Charles Dickens’s The Cricket on the Hearth, so there is no mention of Wilde or his fairy tales anywhere in this paragraph. It does serve as a hat tip to one of the book’s features, which is that all six chapters contain their own different Dickensian connection, each briefly relating some aspect of my take on that chapter’s Wilde work to a new Dickens novel, but if readers were to go by page 99 and the sheer number of its lines devoted to Dickens, they could not be blamed for assuming this is yet another book on Boz.Learn more about The Importance of Being Different at the University of Virginia Press.
That being said, there are some snippets from the partial paragraphs that do provide a snapshot of the book’s concern with Wilde’s fairy tale. The end of the first one acknowledges the tension in “The Happy Prince” between the era’s more typical renderings of disability as a form of martyrdom and the story’s disability-aligned protagonist who stands out as an agential provider of succor who slots into the role of benefactor rather than recipient of such aid. The start of the third paragraph then raises the important issue of Wilde’s relation to the peculiar protagonists he features in these texts and the extent to which he is self-consciously spoofing sentimentality and/or more earnestly engaging in a form of utopian re-visioning of the importance of being different.
--Marshal Zeringue