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“But I don’t admit that my failure proved my view to be a wrong one, or that my success would have made it a right one; though that’s how we appraise such attempts nowadays—I mean, not by their essential soundness, but by their accidental outcomes.”
This is a true tragedy, but didn’t feel sad, exactly. Instead, the tragic events happen as a matter of course. There was a feeling of predestination in the prose, from the very beginning of the story. I found myself mumbling while reading, like multip ...more
This is a true tragedy, but didn’t feel sad, exactly. Instead, the tragic events happen as a matter of course. There was a feeling of predestination in the prose, from the very beginning of the story. I found myself mumbling while reading, like multip ...more

I read Jude the Obscure years ago in an undergraduate Literature course and remembered feeling emotionally devastated. Time has erased almost all memory of the setting and plot except that of a young child who made a brief appearance. He is called Father Time because he seems perpetually melancholic and aged from having lived a storm-tossed life despite his tender years. My heart broke when I met him again and encountered the hopelessness he must have felt.
Father Time is the son of Jude Fawley, ...more
Father Time is the son of Jude Fawley, ...more

Feb 22, 2020
Ken
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review of another edition
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I wish I could recall other Hardy novels I've read by way of comparison, but I read them so long ago.
On the plus side, there was just enough soap in this opera and pot in this boiler to keep me turning the pages. I was genuinely interested in where our man Jude might wind up. That and how he'd deal with the two strong women in his life: Arabella and Sue.
On the negative side, entirely too much talking, often in situations where people might not even talk. Some unrealistic scenes, especially towar ...more
On the plus side, there was just enough soap in this opera and pot in this boiler to keep me turning the pages. I was genuinely interested in where our man Jude might wind up. That and how he'd deal with the two strong women in his life: Arabella and Sue.
On the negative side, entirely too much talking, often in situations where people might not even talk. Some unrealistic scenes, especially towar ...more

I first read Jude the Obscure as an undergrad, back in the 80s, and hadn't read it since but have always considered it one of my "favorite" books. For this reading, it lost none of its power, beauty, or intensity. If I were to make a list of my "favorite" books or the "best novels," Jude the Obscure would be among the top two or three.
...more

Second reading. A masterpiece!

I love Thomas Hardy - Loved Tess of the D'Urbervilles, Mayor of Casterbridge, Far from the Madding Crowd, and Jude the Obscure. This was probably my 3rd or 4th time reading the story of dear Jude. The song "Hey Jude" by The Beatles seemed to have been written for Hardy's tragic character.
But reading it again, I realized my perspective had shifted since those early teen and 20-something years when I was often moved by tales of bittersweet romances within the context of heteronormative coupledom. ...more
But reading it again, I realized my perspective had shifted since those early teen and 20-something years when I was often moved by tales of bittersweet romances within the context of heteronormative coupledom. ...more

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Jul 25, 2011
Marty
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Mar 19, 2014
Cindy Newton
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review of another edition
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Nov 30, 2016
Pamela
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Feb 11, 2020
Erin
marked it as to-read

May 04, 2021
Danielle
marked it as to-read