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Samantha
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May 27, 2013 12:48PM
Pride & prejudice is my suggestion. You need some female authors in your canon.
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Pride and Prejudice was the third or fourth book I read in this years march through the classics. I've also read Wuthering Heights and Frankenstein this year, so I'm not completely devoid of female authors so far. That said, I don't have a lot of other females authors from the public domain era lined up on my possible reading list. Oh, and I have decided on my next book; I'm three chapters into Brave New World.
I'll be curious to hear what you think of it. I used to teach that one back when I taught sophomore English.
I thought it was an excellent novel for voice, clarity, and humor, with well developed characters and an amazing depth of setting. Of all the 100+ year old novels I've read this year, I'd say it felt the most "modern," in that I could see it in the template for every romantic comedy ever filmed. That said, ultimately I had a hard time really falling in love with the novel. If you think about it, it's a story in which powerful young men of considerable wealth get to marry the women they wish to marry with remarkably few obstacles of consequence in their way, aside from class issues that have little resonance today. (In this book, it's considered shameful that Elizabeth's uncle works (shudder) for a living.) I was also kind of bugged that a lot of the novel's biggest events take place off stage, and we only learn about them second hand. So, while it was a good novel that I'm glad I read, it's nowhere near ending up on my current top ten list of favorite novels.
I remember being very interested in the world, but not the characters. I thought the whole concept fascinating, but it was like Huxley built a world and forgot to put anybody in it that mattered. As an angry young woman (as I was in my young teaching career), I was offended by the lack of any admirable female characters (not that the males were admirable either). It would be interesting to read again and see how the years have changed my view. Maybe this summer. BTW, I meant to ask how you liked Pride and Prejudice. It's a longstanding favorite of mine, and I don't know many men who have read it. Did you read P&P&Z, too? I have a theory that Seth Graeme-Smith's novel is not nearly as good if you didn't already know and love P&P.
Just to be clear, my previous comments were about Pride and Prejudice, not Brave New World. I haven't read the zombie version of the former. I'll probably read more Jane Austin later on, but right now I'm trying for as many different authors as possible.


