Tess of D'urbervilles
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Tess of D'urbervilles

3.65 of 5 stars 3.65  ·  rating details  ·  82,860 ratings  ·  3,786 reviews
Chosen by Anne Michaels as her Orange Inheritance. This Orange Inheritance Edition of Tess of the D'Urbervilles is published in association with the Orange Prize for Fiction.
Books shape our lives and transform the way we see ourselves and each other. The best books are timeless and continue to be relevant generation after generation. Vintage Classics asked the winners of...more
Published (first published 1891)
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Steve
HEADLINE: A bad guy who is fabulously talented in bed and a good guy who fumbles sex can complicate life for a girl.


I ought to have my head examined for undertaking a review of Tess of the d'Ubervilles, the next to the last of Thomas Hardy's novels. My purpose in considering the idea was that I might perhaps persuade one other person to read this novel who might not otherwise. I am all about service to my fellow man. However, there are strange aspects of this novel that when discussed in remove...more
notgettingenough
As Tess leaves the new Amazon site.....another, if small, sadness.


http://alittleteaalittlechat.wordpres...
karen
there will probably be spoilers here. i will possibly rant. if you don't know what happens in tess, it is better not to read this review, although, frankly, to my way of thinking, hardy has so many superior novels, stories, poems, that you would be better served just avoiding this one and going on to one of the great ones like jude or mayor of casterbridge instead. but there is something sneaking up in me - a bubblingly vague feeling of well-wishing for poor doomed tess, that makes me think i mi...more
Kim

There are mild spoilers in this review and major spoilers in the comments which follow.

For the past 18 months I’ve been reacquainting myself with Thomas Hardy’s novels through the medium of audiobooks, starting with Alan Rickman’s excellent narration of The Return of the Native and moving on to listen to Under the Greenwood Tree, The Mayor of Casterbridge and Jude the Obscure. Overall, this has been a very positive experience and I’ve wanted to listen to Tess for a while, albeit with a degree...more
Joel
There's this Lars von Trier movie called Dancer in the Dark, starring Björk of all people. She plays a poor factory worker in rural America. She's going blind (which is not great when you work around heavy machinery), but she needs to save up enough money to pay for an eye operation for her son. To escape her misery, she imagines elaborate musical sequences in her mind. She's also kind of an idiot.

Now, what Lars is going for here could be called misogyny or satire or sociopathy, but in short: he...more
Cori
Sep 10, 2007 Cori rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: lovers of classic literature
From my blog:

This book was fantastic. It was bleak and heartbreaking, but fantastic. I'm not sure I've ever been so sad for a main character before. But wow, Hardy can write. I'm going to outline the plot, including the ending, so please note that there are SPOILERS AHEAD.

Tess Durbeyfield, a poor girl, finds out she's actually the descendant of the once-mighty D'Urbervilles. She goes in search of work at her relatives' home, and meets Alec D'Urberville (no actual relation -- he stole the name),...more
Melissa
This is mostly just a note for me-- I wrote it as I finished the book, and it definitely gives away the ending, but I wanted to post it here because I decided this would be a good place for me to keep track of my thoughts.
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I just finished reading Tess of the D'urbervilles, and I have to say I'm a little disappointed. Maybe disappointed is not the right word... but it's more than just bummed about the sad parts of the plot. Of course, I am sad about the way the story en...more
J
I could have been perfectly happy with Alec. Then Angel broke my heart. I had trouble making out the words through my white-hot indignant anger. Then I cried and cried and the type ran and all those painful words pooled down at the bottom of the page before running out onto my lap. I've never told anyone these things. Should I have? Does anyone care?
Shannon (Giraffe Days)
Tess Durbeyfield is the eldest daughter of well-meaning but irresponsible working-class parents. Innocent, poor but hard-working, she lets her mother persuade her to go to the home of a d'Urbeville - thought to be a relative, with Tess's father the last of the ancient knightly house of d'Urbeville, now long extinct. Her father is convinced that others should call him Sir John and give him money; her mother, Joan, thinks that putting Tess in the way of gentle folk will win her a gentleman who'll...more
Bonnie

Barbara recommended Tess to me this summer.

This is truly a book for celebrating the beauty of our language. As I read, I rejoiced that English is my native language! Do try to read Tess as leisurely as possible.

Hardy is masterful at weaving an intricate plot. Tess is a resplendent character; she jumps from the pages of the book and emerges as a life force before our very eyes. Her beauty is palpable. The language caresses and jars. We are plunged into the life of small hamlets in the English cou...more
Laura
When I first read this at 18, I hated it with the heat of a thousand suns. Tess was weak, gullible, and apparently doomed to plunge herself from one bad situation into another, while Hardy was clearly a fatalistic atheist. Why on earth would anyone read him? I’m still wondering what possessed me to read other novels of his — perhaps a perverse desire to see if they were just as bad. Whatever the reason, I did continue reading him and surprisingly enough became a fan...but never of Tess! That rem...more
S.A. Parham
A few people noted that Hardy is a bit of a hard read, and that turned out to be true. His style is jagged and choppy, bouncing around quite a bit, and never giving you a true glimpse of some scenes important to know how to interpret (such as the question of Tess' seduction or rape by Alec d'Urberville). However, overall, it is an interesting story at least and I enjoyed the book. But considering the ending seemed to be rather ill-fitting to the rest of the tale, I'll have to pass on giving it a...more
Rowena
If I'd only known how much I would enjoy this book, I wouldn't have let it sit on my shelf for 5 long years!

I adore classics but it is hard for me to read a lot of them without feeling some indignation of the injustices dealt to women. Hardy presents us with Tess, a young woman who really doesn't have much control over her life. She is forced to sacrifice herself time and again for her family, including her child-like parents. Poor Tess. My heart really ached for her. Having to go through all s...more
Sheila
Because I'm a woman, I'm sympathetic to the sufferings of Tess of the d'Urbervilles. I'm also a little angry, but no one can accuse me of directing my ire at the novel's author, a man who wrote about a pure woman, Thomas Hardy.

For him, I have only admiration and respect for his imagination and realism.

In his critical novel, every evil imaginable has happened to the eponymous heroine, Tess, whose sins (and I say this with sarcasm) are that she was born poor, uneducated, and unprotected even by...more
Brandon
Note: There will be spoilers in this review; one cannot talk about Tess of the D'Urbervilles without discussing its tragic plot.

Tess has been a breath of fresh air in my literary choices lately. Before reading this novel by Thomas Hardy, I thought I had read all of the most depressing novels in literary history; boy was I wrong. Hardy constructed his literary anti-heroine out of depression and affliction; he placed her in a time of misogyny and hypocrisy. If Tragedy and Melancholy were to procre...more
Alex
I am currently sitting in a gorgeous B&B in the very county where Thomas Hardy was born, a few miles from a hill Tess herself climbed. Sydling, in case you were wondering. Dorset. It's beautiful, and this book is really location-specific - Hardy spends an inordinate amount of time describing the countryside in minute detail, and you look out the window and yep, that's what it's like.

The advice I give to people who aren't feeling Tess, which never helps because if you ain't feelin' it it ain'...more
Amber Tucker
Jan 21, 2011 Amber Tucker rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Heather Tucker, Social/religious skeptics, romantics
Recommended to Amber by: Dr. Stewart - class reading
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Werner
Mar 15, 2009 Werner rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Fans of 19th century fiction
Shelves: classics, books-i-own
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Jill
Wow. I really enjoyed this book. I was just really impressed with Thomas Hardy. It seemed that he was somehow able to communicate his story on a whole level beyond just reading words on a page. Not being a writer myself I have trouble trying to describe what I mean, but it was very obvious to me that he is a cut above many who call themselves authors.

The story itself seems to me to be the definition of bitter irony. Tess is such a deep and interesting character to study. I was glad that Hardy wa...more
Blair
I simply adored this book - so much so, in fact, that I didn't immediately want to write about it; I don't think I'm going to be able to properly articulate the effect it had on me. I loved so many things about it: Tess herself, who I fell in love with almost straight away and empathised with throughout; the painfully realistic depiction of emotions and reactions; the glorious, romantic descriptions of the landscapes the characters inhabited (which made me yearn for country life even more than I...more
Nathan
I love reading Thomas Hardy just to see what kind of terrible things he's going to put his characters through; Tess of D'Urbervilles is no different.

I also love when authors build ambiguity into their works. Was Tess raped, or was she willingly seduced? The second half of the novel is a completely different read depending on which you believe.

Having read the book for a senior seminar course in college, I got the opportunity to take a nice deep look into it, and I still feel like I barely scratc...more
Rachel
Aug 12, 2007 Rachel rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Anyone, unless you're prone to depression
Recommended to Rachel by: High School Class
Shelves: 1-favorites
Wow...I don't even know where to begin. Has a more sympathetic character ever been created? Has a more heart-breaking book ever been written? I first read Tess of the D'Urbervilles in my A.P. English class, and immediately fell so, so deeply in love. The story, the heroine, the villain, the even-worse villain, the sadness of it all - plotted flawlessly and written masterfully, Tess of the D'Urbervilles will leave any reader weeping both in despair and awe. Thomas Hardy, wherever you are, thank y...more
Zoe
Well, I know that I’m might be in minority because I think that Hardy's writing style is not all that depressing and maybe this is because ,I don’t enjoy too much reading about perfect characters ,or only stories with good ending , I like to read things that mirror and tells us what life really is /was for some people and certain times and places , to know the disturbing facts but realistic ones and try to not compare them with the modern time we all leave on , I just want to feel the story whil...more
Lori
I don't think I will ever know how to write a proper book review, so you're getting a short and sweet comment on this as I just finished this book and I'm tired. To put it very simply, I loved it. I have a weakness for classic novels and this was, in my opinion, one of the best I've ever read...in that it was like no other that I have read so far. The characters are endearing...Tess is a doll and it has been so long since I've felt sympathy, or any other feeling for that matter, for a character....more
Vishy
One of my favourite friends during my college days told me about ‘Tess of the d’Urbervilles’ first. I never got around to reading it at that time. My friend told me a little bit about the plot and it looked sad. So, when I got the chance to read the book recently, I decided to take it. I did a readathon a couple of days back and finished reading it. Here is what I think.

What I think

‘Tess of the d’Urbervilles’ is about a young woman called Tess who is from a poor family. Tess’ father is a haggler...more
Care
My first Thomas Hardy! Found this edition at the library to accompany my free eBook/iBook version. For bookclub.
Maria
I hated this passionately, which is perhaps unfair, as the book is really quite admirable for tackling the subject of double standards applied to male and female sexual behaviour. But this is one of the most depressing, pointless novels I’ve ever read in my life. I have loathed this book for ten years and I will not stop.
Rebecca
Is it sadistic of me to complain that Tess of the D’Urbervilles doesn’t end tragically enough? Up until the last couple of chapters, I was bound and determined to add this book to my list of All Time Favorites. Tears streaming, tissues gracing the floor all around me (husband checking in on me to make sure I was all right – but leaving fairly sure that I wasn’t), I gathered up my wits just after that particular moment (which shall not be named) and waited for the more tragic moment I knew was ne...more
Chris
Tess is one of the more depressive novels I've read lately. My wife will attest to the fact that I have a strange affinity to depressing stories. With that in mind, let me say that I really enjoyed this book.

The writing was at times a bit too much for me for the reason that I get annoyed at many 18th and 19th century novels...namely, that Hardy focuses far too much on minute descriptions and in-depth analysis of setting and location. Don't get me wrong, I love a vivid and lush environment and I...more
Caryl
Love, love, love he wants her love
He wants her body; she wants her revenge
D'Urbervilles in a bad romance

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topics  posts  views  last activity   
Who do you think is most responsible for the fate of Tess? 80 304 11 hours, 7 min ago  
What is Angel's intention for not answering Tess's critical question? 10 54 Apr 21, 2013 07:02am  
The reason why Tess lost Angel second time... 16 28 Apr 21, 2013 05:58am  
Did you finish reading the book? 69 284 Apr 17, 2013 12:44pm  
Selflessness and virtue, not rewarded after all. 7 57 Apr 10, 2013 10:49pm  
amazon wouldn't let me post my review until I removed the word "nigger" 19 106 Mar 20, 2013 06:40am  
Was Tess raped or was she seduced? 50 378 Mar 19, 2013 11:41am  
Tess of the d'Urbervilles (Paperback)
Tess of the d'Urbervilles (Paperback)
Tess of the d'Urbervilles (Paperback)
Tess of the d'Urbervilles (Paperback)
Tess of the D'Ubervilles (Hardcover)

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Thomas Hardy, OM, was an English author of the naturalist movement, although in several poems he displays elements of the previous romantic and enlightenment periods of literature, such as his facination with the supernatural. Though he regarded himself primarily as a poet and composed novels mainly for financial gain. The bulk of his work, set mainly in the semi-fictional land of Wessex, delineat...more
More about Thomas Hardy...
Far from the Madding Crowd  Jude the Obscure The Mayor of Casterbridge The Return of the Native  The Woodlanders

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“A strong woman who recklessly throws away her strength, she is worse than a weak woman who has never had any strength to throw away.” 358 people liked it
“Did you say the stars were worlds, Tess?"
"Yes."
"All like ours?"
"I don't know, but I think so. They sometimes seem to be like the apples on our stubbard-tree. Most of them splendid and sound - a few blighted."
"Which do we live on - a splendid one or a blighted one?"
"A blighted one.”
139 people liked it
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