Operation Wandering Soul (novel)

Operation Wandering Soul is a novel by American author Richard Powers. It was a finalist for the National Book Award.

Operation Wandering Soul
Cover to first edition hardback
AuthorRichard Powers
Cover artistNeil Stuart, based on Pieter Bruegel the Elder Massacre of the Innocents
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Published1993 (William Morrow and Company)
Media typePrint (hardback)
Pages352
ISBN0-688-11548-9

Operation Wandering Soul tells the story of a children's ward in "Carver Hospital" from the point of view of Richard Kraft, an overworked surgical resident, and therapist Linda Espera. It is set in "Angel City".

The title comes from the Vietnam War psychological warfare operation of the same name, which Kraft's father was involved in.

The novel includes extensive material based on his teenage years growing up in Bangkok.

Summary

The novel does not have a plot as such. Kraft and Espera treat a desperate range of children, including an Asian boat girl Joy Stepaneevong from Thailand, a progeria victim, a boy with no face, and numerous accident and crime victims. Joy turns out to own a good luck charm that Kraft recognizes as once being owned by his father, a necklace angel that his father lost in a helicopter while engaging in "Operation Wandering Soul", broadcasting alleged spirit messages.

The narrative is frequently interrupted with retellings of classic stories and histories of mistreated children, including the Children's Crusade, the Pied Piper, the evacuation of children from London during the Blitz, Anne Frank and the Holocaust, and the Münster Rebellion. The story of Peter Pan is told in counterpoint.

The children in the hospital stage their own version of the Pied Piper.

Authorial presence

Critics of Powers' fiction commonly find parallels between Richard Powers and his main character. In Operation Wandering Soul, similar biographical details include their teenage years in Thailand. The name "Kraft" is German for "strength" or "force", suggestive of "powers".[1]

Reception

This book is not easy to love. It isn't seductive, and its characters don't spring quickly to life. Instead, Mr. Powers offers a devastating phantasmagoria of words and images.

Meg Wolitzer, The New York Times[2]
gollark: So it could download a manifest file, see "hmm, this is version 1247.-006.3a and 1248.3033030.æææ is available, I must now update these files".
gollark: I would probably just go for automatically generated machine-readable changelogs of some form.
gollark: *Currently* I can't do half of those because there's no actual versioning mechanism, and no way to compile stuff because it is all run straight off pastebin.
gollark: Having version control would probably make some potatOS things I've wanted possible, such as verified boot where potatOS ensures that the currently installed stuff matches a checksum, compressed updates, and updates which work if I change a non-core file (the updater logic is very weird).
gollark: And I think cloud catcher.

References

  1. Joseph Dewey (2002). Understand Richard Powers. University of South Carolina Press. p. 157. ISBN 9781570034428.
  2. Meg Wolitzer (1993-07-18). "The Assault on Children". New York Times.
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