white_hart (
white_hart) wrote2019-01-02 11:02 am
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Reading: Middlemarch
I've been surprised, since mentioning that I planned to re-read Middlemarch over the Christmas and New Year break this year, how many people have commented to say that they disliked it and struggled to get through it. I'd only read it once before, and that was while I was at sixth form (so probably 1991, though it may have been early 1992), but I very much enjoyed it then and the only reason I haven't re-read it before now (including when I was supposed to read it at university) is because of the difficulty of finding the time to read a 900-page book through all the years when I was reading painfully slowly; it took the combination of having managed to build up my reading speed to the point where I can confidently expect to read an average-length book in a week, and having a clear fortnight with very little to prevent me reading, to feel confident enough to attempt a re-read.
Even at a distance of nearly 30 years, I was surprised how clearly some scenes and phrases had stayed with me (including a surprising number of things that I could have sworn belonged to a completely different canon), although there were other things (the whole Raffles subplot, just for starters, and Fred Vincy's choice of career) which I had completely forgotten. Eliot's wonderful moments of narrative snark, which are what appealed to me the most as a teenager, are as wonderful as I remembered them, but the adult me also saw and loved her boundless compassion for all of her characters, despite their faults and follies, and delighted in the beautifully detailed picture of a community, and the various ways in which well-meaning people can move beyond the mistakes of early adulthood to find, if not always happiness and never the life they originally envisaged, at least a degree of contentment. It's a brilliant book which absolutely deserves its reputations as one of the great classics of English literature, and I hope that it isn't another 30 years until the next time I re-read it.
Even at a distance of nearly 30 years, I was surprised how clearly some scenes and phrases had stayed with me (including a surprising number of things that I could have sworn belonged to a completely different canon), although there were other things (the whole Raffles subplot, just for starters, and Fred Vincy's choice of career) which I had completely forgotten. Eliot's wonderful moments of narrative snark, which are what appealed to me the most as a teenager, are as wonderful as I remembered them, but the adult me also saw and loved her boundless compassion for all of her characters, despite their faults and follies, and delighted in the beautifully detailed picture of a community, and the various ways in which well-meaning people can move beyond the mistakes of early adulthood to find, if not always happiness and never the life they originally envisaged, at least a degree of contentment. It's a brilliant book which absolutely deserves its reputations as one of the great classics of English literature, and I hope that it isn't another 30 years until the next time I re-read it.
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Fair comment. I suppose I'm comparing impact on my thinking and emotions rather than the books per se.
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I grew up with Dickens, coming, as I do, from his home town and there are bits of his work that remain with me fifty plus years on, crystal clear.
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I am reading Mansfield Park for the first time instead, after being unable to get through more than two chapters in my teens.
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I re-read Mansfield Park about 18 months ago and liked it a lot; it's not as immediately accessible as some of the others, because Fanny is harder to love than a Lizzy Bennett, but it definitely rewards the effort.
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I had to read Mansfield Park for A-level, and I was the only person that year (40ish of us doing A-level English) to like Fanny Price at all.
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I was listening to the Galactic Suburbia podcast last night and they were talking about Joanna Russ's How to Suppress Women's Writing, and one of the things they mentioned was the tendency to regard writing by/about women as being less universal than writing by/about men, and the tendency to pigeonhole writing by women as being "romance" and then dismiss it because of that, when actually a focus on marriage and relationships doesn't make a book a romance. (Jane Austen Never Wrote A Romance In Her Life is a hill I will die on.)
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I did read the book two years ago: as with a lot of long or difficult books I want to read but struggle with, I got it as an audiobook (free from librivox.org) and that worked really well for me. I remember being at the gym on a treadmill listening to this story, and that kind of thing. :) I absolutely loved the book.
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I can’t do audiobooks - I’m terrible at auditory processing and just end up getting distracted and losing track of the narrative, but I can see that if they work for you that would be a great option.
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(I love your book reviews, by the way. I don't always comment but I always read. Thank you for posting.)