The House of the Seven Gables

by Nathaniel Hawthorne
The House of the Seven Gables
book data
2252 ratings, 3.31 average rating, 234 reviews (more data...)
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published
August 3rd 2006 (first published 1851) by Waking Lion Press

binding
Paperback, 316 pages

isbn
1600964427   (isbn13: 9781600964428)

description
The wealthy Colonel Pyncheon covets the carpenter Mathew Maule’s land. A few years later, during the witch hysteria in Salem, Maule is brought b...more






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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 3059)



Jason Pettus
01/14/08

Read in January, 2008
(My full review of this book is much larger than GoodReads' word-count limitations. Find the entire essay at the Chicago Center for Literature and Photography [cclapcenter.com:].)

The CCLaP 100: In which I read 100 supposed "classics" for the first time, then write reports on whether or not I think they deserve the label

Book #2: House of the Seven Gables, by Nathaniel Hawthorne

The story in a nutshell:
Like any good horror story, the spooky House of the Seven Gables ...more
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Andrea
Andrea rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
02/17/08

bookshelves: classics
Read in February, 2008
recommended to Andrea by: the house itself
I did it, DTA!!! And I can almost feel the handsome Mr. Hawthorne smiling down on me as I type. :-)
After touring the house in July 2007, I felt the least I could do was to read the book that made the house famous. While I'm not generally a fan of 19th century American literature (give me Dickens any day!), I ended up enjoying this a lot more than I thought I would. By the 3rd chapter, Hawthorne's language had drawn me into the story, but it was his occasional flights of slyly sarcastic humor t...more
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Skylar
01/05/08

bookshelves: 1001, classics
This mysterious novel about a cursed family and its mansion is one of Hawthorne's few works with a happy ending. Perhaps Hawthorne, when he wrote it, had come to some degree of peace with the curse that was rumored to have been placed upon his own family. The novel is interesting, and it contains some profound insights. It boasts one of Hawthorne's "reformer" characters, Holgrave. Hawthorne did not seem to have much faith in reform and reformers, but Holgrave is a more sympathetic c...more
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Joe
03/27/08

bookshelves: classics-that-suck
I'm so glad you're dead, Nathaniel Hawthorne.

So this is a classic horror novel in which nothing at all happens for a few hundred pages except the description of some house, an old hag selling oatmeal, and some guy who may or may not have hypnotized the other chick who's boarding there. There might be something scary but I was too busy falling asleep to notice. If Hawthorne were alive, he'd be a zombie, which I'd totally be okay with because then he could get shot in the head by zombie expe...more
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Vanessa
Read in July, 2007
How can you not love a ghost story? Even better, a ghost story that unravels to reveal how superstition can obscure truth (in this case, science.) I have read Hawthorne before and should not have been suprised, but I was, regardless, surprised by Hawthorne's sharp criticism of superstition. Hawthorne's language (quaint) belies the modernity of his resolution.

He also has an obvious fondness for quirky characters, which is sweet.

You do have to push youy way past a certain point in reading ...more
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Alan Fay
12/04/08

recommends it for: nobody
This is the worst book ever written in the English language that is somehow celebrated against far superior novels from the same era, somehow earning him enough respect to have his crusty face emblazoned onto the Library of Congress.

If the story were to take place in modern day Atlanta, it would be about some inbred, old money steel magnolia losing her shit up in Buckhead, and dragging her family down with her while she squanders what little remains of their inheritance on palm readers and t...more
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Sean
11/16/08

Read in November, 2008
I remember thinking Hawthorne was really boring and dry when we had to read the scarlet letter in high school, so it was a great surprise to find such a thoughtful, playful, and ironic narrative voice in this great little novel. no wonder Melville was such a fan! the romantic lead is an anarchist, hypnotizing photographer (actually daguerrotypist) who can see ghosts- how cool is that?
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Peter
02/17/08

Read in February, 2008
A fabulous book. I had never really read Hawthorn before, and picked this up after reading some of his letters from Brook Farm. It's a tale of the ruin and decay of a wealthy new england family; wealth, corruption and death, sinister, with an omenous creeping quality, and a surprisingly scooby-doo-esque, happy ending!
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Clif Hostetler
11/24/08

bookshelves: novel
Read in November, 2008
The House of the Seven Gables begins with a preface by the author that identifies the work as a romance, not a novel. That may be the author's preference, but I think most romance fans will be disappointed if they read this book. The book is a classic by a famous American author, so it deserves to be read. Once you finish the book and look over the complete plot, you can see how romantic love has healed a 200-year family curse. Therefore, in that regard it is a romance. However, the experien...more
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Jen
10/15/08

bookshelves: 2008-read, fiction, lit-major, mysteries-n-thrills
Read in October, 2008
recommended to Jen by: My 10th grade English teacher.
Catching up on my American Lit classics. Boy, Hawthorne sure loves to pack a lot of words into every sentence! A melodrama of sorts, but tempered by Hawthorne's delight in the ironic. I got a kick out of the book.
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Christie
When I finished this story, I found it hard to care about it. It is my least favorite of Hawthorne's books. The characters were mostly unlikable, the plodding plot fattened up with many pages of useless description that added nothing. It was a relief to be done with it, an achievement that can only be attributed to my stubborn refusal to stop reading once engaged, no matter how annoying the material. :o) It does feel irreverent to be trashing Nathaniel Hawthorne. But time would be better spent ...more
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David
03/14/08

Read in January, 2002
Although is have been over 5 years since I have read this book (the last time was a tragic affair in high school that quite possibly permanently scarred me as a Hawthorne disliker/hater), I retain the feeling that if I read this novel again, now that my tastes are both more evolved and more refined, I would have extreme difficulty in getting through the story. Although some would argue that Hawthorne is a master of imagery, with this piece being second only to the Scarlet Letter, I found the bo...more
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Mary
03/05/08

Read in January, 2007
I finally got around to reading this last year. Slower moving but good study of characters. One paragraph towards the end jumped out at me, it refers to Hepzibah, a lonely, mistreated women ....

"Returning to the arched window, she lifted her eyes-scowling, poor, dim-sighted Hepzibah, in the face of heaven!-and strove hard to send up a prayer through the dense gray pavement of clouds. Those mists had gathered,as if to symbolize a great, brooding mass of human trouble, doubt, confusion,...more
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Holly
02/19/08

bookshelves: interesting-books
Aside from the fact that not many people like Nathaniel Hawthornes books. I absolutely loved 'House of Seven Gables'

The story is fantastic, its about a family who are so full of pride that they have pushed themselves into ruine. Until one member of the family comes back and teaches them how to save themselves and learn how to enjoy life.

They've spent their whole lives living in a world and wrapped around this curse from their ancester and the house they live in. When in truth their curse...more
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Kristen
Read in January, 2008
Home ownership remains an enduring symbol of the ideal of America as a land of opportunity, but as Hawthorne depicts, the American dream has long been sullied by the inequities of wealth and power in a capitalistic society. Houses and property became ornaments of wealth and symbols of power, a way of making one’s socioeconomic class apparent to friends, family and foes. As such, the acquisition of real estate, the accumulation of excessive wealth, became sport for the powerful, as with ...more
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Shawn
07/30/07

recommends it for: few
This book dares you to read it. I hadn't thought about putting it up here, because, in fact, I have never finished it. I have the distinction of having had the book assigned to me no less than three times in various college courses, and never once read the whole thing.

The problem is I do not care about a single character in this novel. A rich family is cursed because they screwed over a poor family? Great. Where's the conflict? I hate rich people, and didn't want to see them redeemed.

Th...more
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Vrinda
06/27/07

bookshelves: have-read
Read in January, 2000
i think it says something that, looking at other readers' reviews on here, people who hated it had lots to say, and people who loved it didn't have much to say at all in the way of reasons. i have read 3 things by hawthorne, now, and all of them are melodramatic writing about absolutely nothing at all happening. the only thing i'll say for this book is that it's hilarious, if read in the right mindset - hilarious because it's so over the top about everything. also, i wasn't certain if it was ...more
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Erin
07/22/07

Read in July, 2007
It took me TEN MONTHS to get through this book and it's only 400 short pages. I just kept putting it down and reading another. I feel like maybe I didn't put my all into it, but really I think it was just dry and slow and boring and the point it made could have been made in a short essay. I really don't know why he bothered developing anything because I didn't learn anything from the developments of character or plot. The only things I did learn came from little tangents he went off on. And...more
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John
08/16/07

Read in September, 2003
recommends it for: Literary readers, classics readers
While still preoccupied with human strife, Hawthorne cuts more quickly to its causes and ends, rather than the angst and depressive run-ons in The Scarlet Letter. House of Seven Gables shows more interest in technology, moving into a theme of a culture moving ahead, out of the time of its author's Puritan ancestors. There is also more diversity of action and characterization in the book, as not every is sad in their helplessness when they are helpless, and there is not nearly as mu...more
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Mindy
Mindy marked it as to-read (review of isbn )
06/03/08

bookshelves: fiction, own-it, to-read
recommended to Mindy by: A traveling book salesman!
I have ten or so books from this "Best Loved Classics" series, which my mom bought for me (along with an encyclopaedia, a set of science books, and several children's readers) from a traveling salesman when I was maybe 7 or 8 years old. So, here I was with all this bound knowledge but no one to help me figure it all out... I spent hours in my room writing "reports" on my own from the encyclopaedia. I tried to read the "Selected Essays" volume of this series but coul...more
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The House of the Seven Gables (Norton Critical Edition)
The House of Seven Gables (Bantam Classics)
The House of the Seven Gables (Classics Illustrated)
The House of the Seven Gables (Modern Library Classics)
The House of the Seven Gables (Signet Classics)






quotes from this book

"This was a freedom essential to the health even of a character so little susceptible of morbid influences as that of Phoebe. The old house [with dry rot in its structure and perhaps also in its inhabitants];...it was not good to breathe no other atmosphere that that." More quotes...


groups with this book

1001  Books You Must Read Before You Die
Constant Reader
Classic Books