The Woodlanders
by Thomas Hardy
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 281)
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Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
british lit fans
So I read this book because I love Hardy's work--Tess of the d'Urbervilles, Jude the Obscure, and Far from the Madding Crowd. The Woodlanders isn't as famous as these three.
It's interesting to read Hardy and D.H. Lawrence together. Both focus on themes of marital/sexual alienation, discovery, and rebellion, and have great sympathy for women. Both were also poets, and Hardy went so far as to shun novel-writing for poetry later in his life, believing many of his novels, because they were seri...more
It's interesting to read Hardy and D.H. Lawrence together. Both focus on themes of marital/sexual alienation, discovery, and rebellion, and have great sympathy for women. Both were also poets, and Hardy went so far as to shun novel-writing for poetry later in his life, believing many of his novels, because they were seri...more
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I have read this book twice. It is excellent. Very atmospheric. It is set in Little Hintock, a remote wooded village in Blackmoor Vale in his fiction Wessex, in the early part of the second half of the 19th century. It is a good example of Hardy's feeling that "happiness is but a mere episode in the general drama of pain".
I realized the other day, that there is an element of its plot that is similar to that of Rapunzel (where Dame Gothel cut short Rapunzel's braided hair and ca...more
I realized the other day, that there is an element of its plot that is similar to that of Rapunzel (where Dame Gothel cut short Rapunzel's braided hair and ca...more
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Read in March, 2008
Classic Brit Lit, struggle of the classes and urban vs. rural. But I loved this quote from 1887:
"There was nothing remarkable in her dress just now, beyond a natural fitness, and a style that was recent for the streets of Sherton. But, had it been the reverse, and quite striking, it would have meant just as little. For there can be hardly anything less connected with a woman's personality than drapery which she has neither designed, manufactured, cut, sewed, nor even seen, except by ...more
"There was nothing remarkable in her dress just now, beyond a natural fitness, and a style that was recent for the streets of Sherton. But, had it been the reverse, and quite striking, it would have meant just as little. For there can be hardly anything less connected with a woman's personality than drapery which she has neither designed, manufactured, cut, sewed, nor even seen, except by ...more
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bookshelves:
classics
Read in December, 2007
This is my first Hardy in a long time. I forgot how wonderful his language is (something about being a poet. .. ). This story in particular, the characters' lives are so interwoven with their environment that the flowery language is particularly appropriate. It becomes alternately stark or warm, flush or barren. I was expecting it to be more depressing than it was (c'mon, it's Hardy!), but was pleasantly surprised that I only cried once or twice.
As with so much victorian literature, th...more
As with so much victorian literature, th...more
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Not as good as I remember other Hardy novels (until I picked this up I had been under the impression I'd read them all)...it was a little more predictable, a little less gripping, and I thought the ending was weak, but what can I say...it is still at terrific read full of beautifully put and insightful observations. I know everyone already knows it but Hardy is really brilliant and is one of my all-time favourites.
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Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in January, 2003
recommends it for:
no one in particular
A book I wouldn’t be caught dead with. It is one of those things that take you back to school, a book you know you only have to read to get a decent grade. So how come I liked it so much I talked about it months later. It’s too detailed to explain but yes, you should get yourself a copy, only if you’re really bored though. Really bored!
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Read in May, 2007
recommends it for:
calling all Thomas Hardy fans...
I love Thomas Hardy. This book seals the deal. Although I initially doubted his choice of opening female figure versus the female protagonist that dominated most of the story, it all came full circle in the end. This book truly illustrates the style of British rural life Hardy so movingly eulogizes in his novels through narrative.
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This is not as well-known as Hardy's other novels, but this one is up there as my favorite. I also found out it was Hardy's favorite too. One of those great stories about love vs. social status in a small community. Beautiful.
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That finds me with yet another Hardy novel... THis was a good book..I love the tragedy and his absolute refusal to let the main characters have happy endings.
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I know I liked it, but can't remember a thing about it, unlike the other Hardy books I've read
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Read in January, 2008
recommends it for:
hardy fans
This is typical Hardy genius, a deep compassion and stunning plot twists.
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Doesn't it mean something that I read this and can barely remember it?
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