Opal: A Life of Enchantment, Mystery, and Madness by Katherine Beck, K. K. Beck

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: October 2003
  • 288pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: October 2003
    • Publisher: Viking Adult
    • Format: Hardcover, 288pp

    Synopsis

    In 1920, Americans were captivated by the childhood diary of Opal Whiteley, an enigmatic young woman from a small logging town in the Northwest. The diary, which Whiteley claimed a cruel foster sister had torn to shreds many years before, was painstakingly pasted together before publication. It chronicled Opal's adventures in the forests of Oregon at the age of seven and was hailed as a revelatory portrait of a child's relationship to God and the natural world. It also contained strange clues to a mystery surrounding the child's birth. Why were parts of the diary - written in crayon on old paper bags and butcher paper - in French? And who were the mysterious Angel Mother and Father the child referred to?

    The diary became an overnight publishing sensation, and Opal, a beautiful, charming twenty-two-year-old, quickly became a celebrity. Some skeptics dismissed the diary as a hoax, but others remained convinced. Opal is the story of her legacy and of the many ways she has been perceived: New Age prophet and environmentalist, mad genius, long-lost princess, and flamboyant fraud. It is also the tale of the whirlwind and eccentric life she led on several continents after the diary was published and the host of rich, famous, and high-born figures she enchanted and counted as her friends.

    Thoroughly examining Opal's personal papers and letters and interviewing those who knew her, Katherine Beck has put together the most complete picture of her life yet.

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    Beck's diligent research pays off as she delivers a mesmerizing account of a 20th- century enigma whose astounding life rivals that of most fictional heroines.

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    Opal: A Life of Enchantment, Mystery, and Madnessby Anonymous

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    November 07, 2003: People interested in the writer Opal Whiteley have long waited for an objective biography. It was hoped that K.K. Beck, author of over a dozen pulp fiction mysteries, would be able to be a literary detective sorting out fact from fiction. However, Beck approaches her story more like a prosecuting attorney than a serious researcher. At times, it seems like she is more out to convict, rather than explain the mysterious Opal Whiteley. She becomes like a guilty baddie in one of Beck's novels. What we read is page after page of much the same thing; Opal was an ambitious, lying, crazy child who hated housework - and she died an ambitious, lying, crazy old woman who hated housework. Case closed. Beck seems to dismiss or ignore almost any information favorable to Opal while magnifying all of her flaws. That is our loss, because this could have been a really good book by a woman who is a fine mystery writer.?Even with its flaws, there is a lot of new information here. Beck gives the most in-depth account yet of Opal?s years in Boston, Washington DC and India. Beck is at her best when describing the cloud of people great and small who moved in and out of Opal?s life. There are some sensationalized accounts of several of Opal?s love affairs. The author did a lot of legwork and traveled to England to research information in the University of London archives. Some of Beck?s new charges against Opal are so sensational that they should require solid evidence before being fully accepted. There is no index, no table of contents and Beck almost never cites complete references or dates, which makes it difficult to check her facts. It is hard to feel confident of Beck?s accuracy and documentation. Beck gets some well-known facts completely wrong. For example, she says on page thirteen that Opal?s first school was in the logging town of Wendling. Beck writes about Opal?s rapid progress in the school and her teacher, Mrs. Daugherty. It is a good story about her early school years ? except it happened in Walden, not Wendling, which is over thirty miles away and a year later in Opal's life. One of Katherine Beck?s main contentions is that Opal did not start writing a diary until she was about twelve years or thirteen years old. She says that ?nobody ever saw a diary? written on scraps of paper and printed with crayons, that every person only saw a diary on lined notebook paper and written in cursive (p.260). This is not quite accurate. Opal Whiteley?s biggest critic, Cottage Grove Sentinel newspaperman Elbert Bede, said in an October 12, 1933 Sentinel article that he has learned of two people, a man and a woman, who had seen this diary. He writes that it is ?beyond being disputed? and that he has ?the most implicit confidence? in the people who say they saw Opal?s childhood diary. He also published these articles in the Portland Oregonian. Beck writes about these 1933 articles, but does not mention what he says about her childhood diary. One point that Beck and I agree on is that Opal showed her Oregon family in a very bad light. They were much better educated than what the legend says.?Truth be told, I myself might have wanted to strangle Opal if I had been one of her family members. Her diary is full of family secrets; about children born out of wedlock, the family making wine when Oregon was dry, gambling, and much other gossip.. Opal critic Elbert Bede, in his private papers says he has ?often wondered? if Opal...