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Loading... North and South (Penguin Classics) (original 1855; edition 1996)by Elizabeth Gaskell, Patricia Ingham (Introduction)
Work InformationNorth and South by Elizabeth Gaskell (1855)
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A Victorian novel that strikes a winning balance of engaging with social issues while providing an engaging story with memorable characters. Margaret Hale could be a bit preachy, but I can't deny female protagonists with strong moral convictions. Definitely worth checking out and I was pleasantly surprised to find a bit more heart and social consciousness than I had come to expect from novels from this era. ( ) Not terrible for Restoration era novels (which I've found are definitely not my thing). The main character breaches class boundaries and maintains her independence in gender roles as well. All in all it's not a very gritty book and seems like everything works out a little too perfectly despite some of the dramatic twists (deaths, etc.) that happen along the way. When Southerner Margaret Hale is forced to relocate to the northern town of Milton, she finds herself hating the industrial society, offended by the townspeople and disgusted by the dirt and noise she finds there. Mill owner John Thornton represents all she has come to despise about her new home. But gradually, Margaret's attitudes soften, and she makes friends with people in the town, learning about the plight of the millworkers - their poverty and workplace struggles. As events throw Margaret and John together, she realises even two complete opposites can fall in love. Is contained inHas the (non-series) sequelHas the adaptationIs abridged inHas as a studyHas as a student's study guideDistinctionsNotable Lists
Classic Literature.
Fiction.
HTML: North and South draws on Gaskell's own experiences of the poverty and hardship of life in the industrial north of England. Her heroine, Margaret Hale, is taken from the wealthy south by her nonconformist minister father, to live in a fictional northern town. The stark differences are explored through Margaret's abrupt change in circumstance, and her sympathetic reaction to the plight of the northerners. She comes into conflict with a local mill owner who proposes marriage to her. The two undergo a series of misunderstandings and changes of heart before they are reunited. .No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)823.8Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction 1837-1899LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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