The Obscure Reading Group discussion
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The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
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Feb. 1 -- Feb. 7 Discussion: Chapters I ("A Discovery") through XIX ("An Incident")
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Quite the turn after chapter XV.
Huntingdon is evidently a Byronic figure who seems to consume his scenes. He, of course, is raw nature, untameable in the sense Helena seems to believe. She is as naive in these early diary passages as Gilbert was beforehand.
On Gilbert - eh.....usually I will pass off some abrasive behaviour as lending to engaging characters and a driver for plot. But his treatment of Mr Lawrence was just thuggish.
Even the preceding chapters that described him losing control with jealousy - I did not feel I was dealing with a purely love-smitten irrationality. It felt like a madman's descent.
Yet I get the impression we are still meant to be rooting for Gilbert? It's a strange one. Onto volume II!
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Books mentioned in this topic
Les Miserables (other topics)The Three Musketeers (other topics)
The Count of Monte Cristo (other topics)
Jude the Obscure (other topics)
Jude the Obscure (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Wilkie Collins (other topics)Thomas Moore (other topics)
Emily Brontë (other topics)
Virginia Woolf (other topics)
Thomas Hardy (other topics)
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Actually, it is more epistolary than you might think! (Re. what's coming up.) Very like Wilkie Collins in some ways - also in the build-up of tension - and with regard to the place and status of women in Victorian society.