George Eliot : the last Victorian

by Kathryn Hughes

Hardcover, 1999

Status

Available

Publication

New York : Farrar Straus Giroux, 1999.

Description

George Eliot's extraordinary life, which produced some of the nineteenth-century's finest fiction, is explored in Kathryn Hughes' new biography. The daughter of a self-made businessman of impeccable respectability, the middle-aged Eliot was cast into social exile when she began a scandalous liaison with the married writer and scientist George Henry Lewes. Only her burgeoning literary success allowed her to overcome society's disapproval and eventually take her proper place at the heart of London's literary elite. The territory of her novels comprised nothing less than the entire span of Victorian society. Although years of rigorous reading had given Eliot an unparalleled understanding of the intellectual debates of her day, she preferred to champion a pragmatic middle ground, where idealism is tempered by love, habit, and history.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member samfsmith
An excellent biography of a fascinating author. Mary Ann Evans, or Marian Evans, or Marian Lewes, or Marian Evans Lewes Cross, or George Eliot: the profusion of names gives you a hint of how complicated her life was. In a time when divorce was difficult (if not impossible), she lived happily with a
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married man for decades. Her life is as complex as the characters in her novels, and this biography deals with the details without obscuring the big picture.

After reading it, I wish that I had know her, which is the ultimate proof that this biography works.
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LibraryThing member Janientrelac
Wasn't much interested in Elliot's work when I started this excellent biography and I am still not interested. But the insight into the social and economic background to her life is intriguing. And the author mentions money, how did these people make a living? Elliot was dependant on her father
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until he died, her brother resented this and pushed her to marry. She was left 90 pounds a year, not enough for more than genteel poverty. Her friend Barbara Bachicon had 300 pounds, enough for a life.
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Awards

James Tait Black Memorial Prize (Winner — Biography — 1999)

Language

Barcode

4795
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