Wives and Daughters
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Wives and Daughters

4.06 of 5 stars 4.06  ·  rating details  ·  15,474 ratings  ·  1,132 reviews
When seventeen-year-old Molly Gibson's widowed father remarries, her life is turned upside down by the arrival of her vain, manipulative stepmother. She also acquires an intriguing new stepsister, Cynthia, glamorous, sophisticated and irresistible to every man she meets. The two girls begin to confide in one another and Molly soon finds herself as a go-between in Cynthia's...more
Kindle Edition, 679 pages
Published (first published 1865)
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Kim

Why has it taken me so long to finally read this wonderful novel? I bought the Penguin edition when I was in my 20s, read a page or two, put it down and didn't pick it up again. The book sat on my shelf for years. For all I know, it could be there still. However, after university I went right off Victorian literature and it's only been in the last twelve months or so that I've felt the desire to tackle it again. And now I've fallen in love with Elizabeth Gaskell's writing.

In brief, the novel is...more
Wealhtheow
Molly Gibson is a kind-hearted, intelligent, sensitive girl who is thrown into society when her father, the equally sensible but far more sarcastic Mr.Gibson, marries. His new wife is flighty, hypocritical, and manipulative, but all in such a soft, pliant way that it is difficult to oppose her. With her comes her daughter Cynthia Fitzpatrick, who is Molly's own age but beautiful where Molly is pretty, and socially brilliant where Molly is genuine. Cynthia and Molly immediately become best friend...more
Jane
Towards the end of last year I spent many happy hours visiting a world so perfectly realised that it still lifts my heart when I think of it. I stepped into the middle of the 1830s, into the English countryside that Mrs Gaskell knew so well, I met people who were so real, fallible, interesting, and I became caught up in their lives and their stories.

At the centre of it all was Molly Gibson, the only child of a widowed doctor. The apple of his eye.

In a lovely prologue she was twelve years old and...more
Lori
Oct 22, 2008 Lori rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Austen fans
Shelves: 2008, fiction
Oh. MY. WORD.

This is, in every sense of the phrase, the never-ending story.

I had been wanting to see the BBC's film version of this book for years, but never got around to it. In a story too complicated to explain, I was not able to get the video, so decided I'd try to read the book instead.

The book is 60 chapters long. SIXTY. 650 pages. The first two slow chapters made me return the book to the library. But the story kept nagging at me, so a few months later, I tried again. The story definitely...more
Cissy
This is my new favorite. Written by a lesser-known British author in the mid-1800s, this novel would be enjoyed by Austen and Dickens fans. It is very long--more than 600 pages in small print--but the characters are wonderfully detailed and the story very compelling. It is not a difficult read, but I do recommend getting a version that has notes explaining period references. I loved the sweetness of the main character, Molly Gibson, and all the different relationships between her and the other c...more
Janet
Apr 09, 2012 Janet rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Jane-ites and Bronte fans
I had high hopes for this based on the reviews of others in addition to the fact that I'm a sucker for 19th c. British writers. Dickens - check. Austen - check. Charlotte, Anne & Emily - check. Eliot - check. Thackeray - check. Collins - a half check. Trollope - a triple check. James (you can argue he's an American) - a quadruple check. Okay, you get the idea.

While I like nothing better than the head games played in provincial drawing rooms they have to be executed by individuals of depth in...more
Mira
Wives and Daughters is Elizabeth Gaskell at her finest. Written in the year preceding her death, the novel unfortunately never got finished. However, it is amazingly enjoyable, and makes one of the best love stories, as well as an excellent social commentary.

Little Molly Gibson, who lives with her widowed father, suddenly has the opportunity to see her world changing, when she is invited for a stay with the Hamleys, while her father is busy elsewhere getting married. In Molly, we have an endear...more
SarahC
This novel achieves much and thoughts of it do not leave the mind quickly. Gaskell captures both the human experience and the beautiful settings of mid-19th-century English country life. You will be drawn into this world as she introduces the lives of the common folk of Hollingford and those who hold distinction either by title or by ancient stewardship of the land. Regardless of rank, Gaskell’s characters face essentially human situations.

Our heroine, young Molly Gibson, on the brink of adultho...more
Kelly
Jul 21, 2011 Kelly rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Elizabeth-sometimes a re-read is a must. Kelly- she must know my joy.
Recommended to Kelly by: Charlotte Bronte
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Elise
Aug 17, 2007 Elise rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: lovers of Austen and the Brontes
I discovered this book in high school when my library gave away a ton of books. I took my brown paper bag full of books, and to my delight, discovered Ms. Gaskell.
The book focuses on one Molly Gibson, a sweet girl, who is almost too good to be true. As we all know, perfect girls don't attract beaus, and poor Molly first loses her father to a n overbearing stepmother, and then her crush to her conceited, flaky stepsister.
Fortunately, there are those who do recognize her merits, and her trials...more
Jane
Where I got the book: free on the Kindle. Although I think I should pick up an annotated edition one of these days.

It's not often I finish a book with a big smile on my face, despite the teasing ending (which had me seriously worried that my free Kindle version had something missing, but then I decided it was entirely consistent with the story). Update: Thanks to more informed friends, I now know that Mrs. Gaskell died before finishing the book, which is the biggest bummer I can possibly think o...more
Anne Ivory
I really loved the beginning chapters of this book, specially the relationship between Molly Gibson and her father. It was so very sweet. You can actually feel her father's panic at the thought of his daughter being left behind at the peer's home, so much so, that he missed his dinner, got back on his horse, even though he'd just returned from a hard day at work, rushed off to bring his daughter back home. And little Molly so frightened by the new-ness of it all, in spite of the fact she had bee...more
Lesley
Lesser Austen, better than Barbara Cartland.

If you've ever wondered how the Bennett sisters' daughters might have turned out, you may find this interesting. Although written in 1866, it is set 30 years earlier, in a time when Austen's universe of landed gentry was undergoing serious challenges from industrialization, scientific discovery, and social mobility.All are themes in the novel, which centers around a brilliant Scottish physician who marries a dim-witted, self-absorbed ex governess and s...more
Kj
I knew I was undertaking a possibly futile adventure when I began reading Elizabeth Gaskell's unfinished novel. Writing it in serialized form from 1864-1866, Gaskell died almost literally before the last 20 pages were completed. So you have the entire story except the resolution (kind of important). But that in itself felt like a fun experiment, and in fact, it was. Instead of finding a neatly wrapped up ending, you suddenly encounter a 150 fifty year old editor's note explain the sad loss of El...more
Jen Stowell
WOW--if you don't already know, this is one of my very favorites (second only to pride and prejudice). If you are an Austen fan you will absolutely love Elizabeth Gaskell. She is a Bronte contemporary and has a very distince style. Like all English novels of this era, Wives can get wordy in spots and there are LONG descriptions. This never bothers me--I guess my imagination needs all the descriptive help it can get.

The story is about a young woman, Molly Gibson, who lost her mother when she was...more
Merritt
I loved this: 650 pages of joy the past few days.
This is the story of Molly Gibson, a girl living with her widower father in the 1820s. Molly is completely satisfied with her life, but her father is worried about Molly being motherless, and so marries again. Soon Molly, her new mother and sister, and the good friends, young men Roger and Osborne Hamley, go through a set of years filled with happiness, death, romance, and grief.
The characters have many weaknesses along with their strength, an...more
Kimberly
Excellent. A young woman copes with the loss of her established routine of life with her widowed father. He remarries and the ensuing changes around her give rise to some predictable difficulties. She also gains a step-sister, who provides a direct contrast to the heroine- yet, she's so skillfully created, that sympathy towards her is still possible (considering her upbringing). I like the way this young woman's understanding of the people around her evolves. She moves from a very black and whit...more
Scott
We had to read this for 12th grade English Lit. Our teacher had gone on a yearlong sabbatical to study Victorian serial novels, and this way one of his "great finds" that he foisted upon us. It was horrible. Serial novelists were paid to keep the story going interminably, and there is no sense of forward movement. Worse, the author died before finishing, and a hack was paid to finish it for her. Belongs in the dustbin of history, not on a 12th grade English lit booklist--having kids read garbage...more
Vibina Venugopal
I wanted to read something in classic and I chose this book for no good reason and to be frank I wasn't really looking forward to it...Like that of the tale of Cinderella with a differemce that our widowed father Mr.Gibson has a teenage daughter Molly Gibson rather than a kido like Cinderella, and he decides to remarry and predicatably a bad choice...
Life of seventeen year year old Molly is that of super contend and quiet well that is how we can describe it until her fathers decision to remarry,...more
Leya
I just finished reading Wives and Daughters by Elizabeth Gaskell, and what a wonderful experience it was. Although I've heard of the author beforehand - I'm a huge fan of the BBC mini series North & South, I had never read her. I also have N&S on my nightstand waiting for its turn. But Wives and Daughters was a library book, I decided to read it first.

Wives and Daughters was the last novel that Elizabeth Gaskell wrote, actually she never finished the book. She dies while writing it. But...more
Leslie
This was really a delightful story that was full of truths in human character. The characters were all believable and it was easy to develop feelings for them. The story had enough twists and turns as to not be too predictable. The characters and story lines had resolution in the end. I particularly appreciated the characters familial relationships and felt that they were accurate representations in their interactions with one another. There are joyful moments, many mistakes and consequences, su...more
Alnoory.
This was a purely satisfying story. In some respects, the women and the men in Wives and Daughters do come across as stereotypes: the wicked stepmother versus a loving mother-figure; the lazy, good-looking older son against the successful-but-ugly younger son. But somehow, the novel rises above stereotype and superficiality. The unspoken emotion in the novel gives the story a gripping tension that I quite enjoyed (and which is lacking in the movie). Molly's inner conflicts deepen the novel, and...more
Parikhit
I am so happy to have discovered Elizabeth Gaskell only made possible through a group read here. I would have genuinely missed out reading and loving the works of this authoress. ‘Wives and Daughters’ is the only one I have read so far and marks the beginning of many more Gaskell authored works.

The story is set in early 19th century in a small English town. The story centres on Molly Gibson, the only daughter of a widowed country doctor, likeable from the very first page with her sweet demeanour...more
Cynthia Andrews
This is my absolute all time favorite book! Next to "Pride and Prejudice," by Jane Austen. Elizabeth Gaskell spins a tale with characters that you grow to love and care for. When I first read the book, i was so disappointed when I finished it. I wasn't ready to let go of the characters. How could this be the end? I was saddened to discover that Mrs. Gaskell had died before finishing the book, and often wonder what other secrets she would have told or plot twists of fate to entwine and entangle M...more
Elizabeth Mundie
Wives and Daughters is a book that can be read on many levels. On the surface, it's an interesting story, and it can be read for fun for plot alone. However, there are many other levels to this book, and that's too big a discussion for a review.

One plot device that I particularly enjoyed was how she represented various historical eras of British manhood through the generations of the Hamley family.

Squire Hamley was the good Saxon rootstock of the British empire. He often notes that the Hamleys c...more
Zan
I really enjoyed this slow building characterization. I think that knowing this was a serialized novel before I dove in probably helped me wrap my head around the episodic nature of the novel, while also preparing me for the intricacies that sometimes drive me crazy in Dickens' works (he was one of Gaskell's contemporaries, friends, and editors). Fortunately, I didn't find the interlacing stories nearly as contrived or elaborate as Dickens' works.

Obviously, one of the most interesting features i...more
Leslie
Deserves its reputation as one of her best. She died with the last chapter or two not yet written, but it's easy to see how things would have ended. The pleasure of the book is not in the ending, but in the fineness of the characterisations. Standouts are Mrs Gibson--the horrible, selfish, stupid, wonderful Mrs Gibson (it's oddly appropriate that the novel breaks off with her voice)--and Cynthia (although the conventions of Victorian novels and the business of publication prevented Gaskell from...more
Margaret
I read Wives and Daughters, Gaskell's last, unfinished novel, for the first time in 2003 and liked it so much that I decided to read it again the next year. I liked it even more the second time. On the surface, it's a tale of English village life, harkening back to Gaskell's first novel, Cranford, but below the veneer of gentility and quiet humor, Gaskell offers up as powerful a critique of Victorian society as in her more overtly "social" novels, like Ruth or Mary Barton.

The heroine of Wives an...more
Marin
This book was charming, and I enjoyed reading it from beginning to premature end.

I hate to be the two millionth person to compare Gaskell to Austen, but so many people are familiar with Jane Austen's work that she has become a handy shorthand author for this type of writing. Readers who love Jane Austen's work will love this book for its similarities, and they may be interested by the differences.

This book is a little darker than, say, Sense and Sensibility. Sometimes the characters acted silly...more
Mary
Maybe I rated this high because it compared so favorably to the book club picks of late. It had only some minor flaws, but overall, this book was a joy to read. I wanted to read Gaskell's words myself after seeing some BBC productions of her work, which I enjoyed. After seeing "North and South" I thought she borrowed a bit from Jane Austen, and I guess I assumed Gaskell to be second rate, simply because she came afterwards, and also because I never read her in college as an English major. But I...more
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Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell, née Stevenson (29 September 1810 – 12 November 1865), often referred to simply as Mrs. Gaskell, was an English novelist and short story writer during the Victorian era. She is perhaps best known for her biography of Charlotte Brontë. Her novels offer a detailed portrait of the lives of many strata of society, including the very poor, and as such are of interest to socia...more
More about Elizabeth Gaskell...
North and South Cranford Mary Barton The Life of Charlotte Brontë Ruth

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