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The Clever Woman of the Family (1865)

by Charlotte Mary Yonge

Other authors: See the other authors section.

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1802160,495 (3.09)36
Classic Literature. Fiction. Historical Fiction. HTML:

Fans of Jane Austen and George Eliot will fall in love with Charlotte Mary Yonge's The Clever Woman of the Family, the tale of a headstrong young woman whose strong opinions and heartfelt desires clash with the social strictures of her era. Will Rachel Curtis rise above the stifling conventions of the age and find true and lasting happiness on her own terms?

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  1. 00
    Marcella by Mrs. Humphry Ward (lahochstetler)
    lahochstetler: Two tales of Victorian women navigating the perils of social reform and romance.
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» See also 36 mentions

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Oh, I did try. I rather liked Ms Yonge's "The Daisy Chain", and I rather liked this- just not enough to press on past p 180.
If the title suggests a tortured genius, some George Eliot type, trying to find her niche in a stifling world....that's a misapprehension, as Rachel, despite her abilities, is a comic character. Her bold declamations show no understanding of others or the real world, and the reader "gets" that she's going to have to learn a bitter lesson.
A spinster, living with her mother and sister, Rachel is soon joined by a widowed cousin and her seven unruly children. Two handsome officers (friends of the deceased husband) soon come to visit...and the children need a governess, who has a saintly invalid sister..
As the characters began a discussion on the morality of allowing a game of croquet....as Bessie's arch, , brilliant quips had this reader asking "say WHAT?!" ...I knew I'd reached the end of the road.
But it's well written, I just couldnt face any more...
  starbox | Feb 7, 2021 |
This book has many of the elements of a classic Victorian novel. There's the long-suffering, nearly saintly invalid. There's a helpless widow, and there's a buffoonish curate. And most importantly, there's an independent-leaning woman whose spunk and desire for knowledge make her foolish. In Yonge's novel we enter the world of Rachel Curtis, the so-named "clever woman," who loves to read the latest tract on educational theory, and hopes some day to put them into practice for the benefit of local youth. But Rachel is also a provincial daughter, and there are few opportunities for an independent and knowledge-hungry woman in the provinces in 1865. Rachel disagrees strongly with women acting flighty and foolish for the benefit of suitors or the clergy. What Rachel values is substance, but she finds little of it in her provincial surroundings. Those around Rachel see her as arrogant and foolish. When Rachel is finally given the opportunity to put her theories into practice, the consequences are more devastating and far-reaching than anyone could have imagined. As I began this book I presumed it was a comedy of manners, but as I got deeper in, I discovered that the book is more than that. The themes are much darker, and consequences more surprising than that. Yonge has drawn some compelling characters in this novel, but there were parts of this story that fell flat. Rachel's mother is the fussiest of Victorian ladies, and we see just how limited that lives of Victorian women like Rachel were. Rachel's ultimate fate will likely not surprise most modern readers, but getting there takes twists and turns I certainly wasn't expecting. ( )
7 vote lahochstetler | Feb 2, 2009 |
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» Add other authors (1 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Charlotte Mary Yongeprimary authorall editionscalculated
Battiscombe, GeorginaAfterwordsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Simmons, Clare A.Editorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Stokes, AdrianIllustratorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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Classic Literature. Fiction. Historical Fiction. HTML:

Fans of Jane Austen and George Eliot will fall in love with Charlotte Mary Yonge's The Clever Woman of the Family, the tale of a headstrong young woman whose strong opinions and heartfelt desires clash with the social strictures of her era. Will Rachel Curtis rise above the stifling conventions of the age and find true and lasting happiness on her own terms?

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Book description
From the back cover: '...it was not so dreadful as people would have one believe, it was no such wrench as novels described to make up one's mind to prefer a systematically useful life to an agreeable man'

At the age of twenty-five Rachel Curtis, daughter of the squire of the Homestead, considers herself 'the clever woman of he family'. Rejecting the idea of marriage, she seeks, instead, a mission in life. An avid reader of popular tracts, Rachel's dream is to mould young minds with her high educational ideals. But her theories are not tempered by experience, and in a long and painful lesson she comes to learn that her true mission is not the one she had imagined. First published in 1865, this is a compelling novel by Charlotte Yonge, one of the greatest story-tellers of her age. Upholding the traditions of Victorian England, it gives a fascinating insight into the ways in which middle-class women were denied personal ambition and taught that devotion and self-sacrifice were the highest virtues to which a woman should aspire.
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