Boxall's 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die discussion

This topic is about
Moll Flanders
1001 Monthly Group Read
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June {2012} Discussion -- MOLL FLANDERS by Daniel Defoe
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hahahahahaha love it!

might I humbly suggest the possibility, however unlikely, that you're missing the point of the list in the first place? It's for important novels in the history of the art form, not for novels that make Fiona feel good. And without accepting that, you're going to "absolutely HATE" many, many more books on the list.
How about this
http://www.gradesaver.com/moll-flanders/
There are some links there that may help you to understand the importance of this, one of the earliest novels in the English language and thereby not only appreciate it but also others on the list you'll encounter if you're serious in your attempt to finish it.
I've been working on the list for 6 years and am coming up to my 350th book. It took me a long time to realise that when I "absolutely HATED" a book, it was because I wasn't a mature enough reader to understand it. That was a humbling experience but one I'm grateful for.
Except for the Mysteries of Udolpho.

I agree that in several points in the book, she clearly refers to the tale as meant for others. It was a journal of sorts, but seemed clearly intended for an outside reader. I also didn't feel she was as cold as some described her as being.
Part of the issue with the children may have been a function of the times and the fact that everyone lost many children in relation to the ones that survived, many in infancy. I think it may be that this affected people's attachment to children, especially as babies. Also, if you look at the way upper class families farmed out children to nurses and governesses for much of the children's early years, we may just be projecting our current way of relating to kids back onto people living in different circumstances. A better comparison might be to women in China in the past several decades, who have let children go for financial and political reasons. Also, remember that the children she had with the first husband were taken by his family while she was not provided for after his death--imagine what that does to a person, and then she lost several children. Also, she did care very much about what happened to the first child she placed with the "governness." I think the accumulation of losses has to have had an impact on her ability to connect after awhile.
I didn't expect to like this book as much as I did. I found it in some ways very sympathetic to the plight of women in Moll's shoes--without fortune and family to protect them as they tried to make their way in the world. I found that particularly impressive coming from a male author. Apparently I'm an outlier in this regard, but it is where I ended up.

I was with you on this. I thought he did remarkably well, particularly given the era in which he was writing.


Are you talking about 18th century Britain or 21st century United Arab Emirates?

To say nothing of the fact that an unmarried woman would go to jail for giving birth. Horror, shock. Society cannot survive with bastard children running around.

It can survive. Unfortunately, while we now sanction "bastard children running around" we have yet to come up with solutions to the social problems it creates. For all our "enlightenment" we don't seem to be much better at dealing with "bastard children running around" in our day than were in Defoe's. At least, that's the evidence I see in the UK.



The part that bothered me more was page after page of theft. Not from a moral standpoint, but from a boredom standpoint. I got it Moll! You've robbed people! You're sneaky! Other people get caught, you should stop, but you don't.


might I humbly suggest the possibility, however unlikely, that you're missing the point of the list in the firs..."
It's not that I "didn't understand" it - it's just that it is really badly written and not particularly enjoyable. "Don Quixote" is a novel which was written before "Moll Flanders" and is far better written and much more enjoyable. I don't think there was anything not to understand about Moll Flanders, I just didn't think it was of an acceptable standard to be on the list. But thanks for the link anyway



Books mentioned in this topic
Fanny Hill, or Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure (other topics)Clarissa, or, The History of a Young Lady (other topics)
I’m thinking that Defoe wrote it to highlight the plight of women during that era and there were so little choices available to them. However, this is an insult to all of the Godly women at the time who managed without incest, prostitution, theft, fraud etc!
She seems to pop out children left write and centre, which is fine … there was no contraception in those days … HOWEVER … what is unforgivable is that the author seems to completely forget about their existence and we’re left thinking … “Hang on … where did THEY go???”
I would not recommend this book to my worst enemy and has to be one of the biggest wastes of time I have ever endured.
I have absolutely NO idea whatsoever as to why it is on Boxall’s list because I could quite happily have died never having touched this load of claptrap with a barge pole.
Moll Flander could take up several episodes of the Jeremy Kyle Show. That's what I kept imagining throughout the whole sorry tale!