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George Eliot: The Last Victorian Hardcover – Dec 1 1998
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Hardcover, Nov. 5 1998 | $22.67 | — | $22.67 |
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"Seriously scholarly yet nonetheless accessible to the general reader, fascinating." -Margaret Forster
- LanguageEnglish
- Publisher4th Estate
- Publication dateDec 1 1998
- Dimensions15.24 x 2.95 x 23.7 cm
- ISBN-101857024206
- ISBN-13978-1857024203
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Product details
- Publisher : 4th Estate; First Edition (Dec 1 1998)
- Language : English
- ISBN-10 : 1857024206
- ISBN-13 : 978-1857024203
- Item weight : 760 g
- Dimensions : 15.24 x 2.95 x 23.7 cm
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,345,410 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #134,749 in Biographies & Memoirs (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Kathryn Hughes was born near Manchester, UK in 1964. After thirty years working as a secretary and bringing up two children, she finally realised her dream of writing a book. Her debut novel, The Letter, set in her home town, was first published in 2013 and since then has become an international best-seller, translated into 30 languages. Her other books include The Secret and The Key. This summer sees the release of her fourth book, Her Last Promise, a sweeping tale of a daughter's quest to unravel the secrets of her mother's disappearance.
Customer reviews
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Each of the major novels is analysed. The poetry gets short shrift, probably rightly. Kathryn Hughes brings out the major contradiction from the novels that all the George Eliot heroines, unlike the author, end up settling for dutiful work in relative obscurity. Hughes is also right that the Eliot heroes, from Adam Bede to Daniel Deronda, have a tendency to priggishness. But I imagine most readers of this book will have read at least some of the novels, and will have their own views.
I think Hughes' judgements are sound, though I hope not too many people are put off reading Romola. Despite the shortcomings of that novel and the insufferable saintliness of the eponymous heroine, the villain Tito Melema is an interesting psychological portrait of the lazy and comfort-loving route to evil. Most importantly, Hughes does full justice to the towering achievement of Middlemarch. Eliot's innate social conservatism is drawn out as a common thread across all the novels, most explicitly in the analysis of Felix Holt.
So, this book will help you understand the background of the woman that became George Eliot and her remarkable intellect that made a lasting contribution to the novel. Well worth a read.
