Lady Isabel Carlyle, a beautiful and refined young woman, leaves her hard-working but neglectful lawyer-husband and her infant children to elope with an aristocratic suitor. After he deserts her, and she bears their illegitimate child, Lady Isabel disguises herself and takes the position of governess in the household of her husband and his new wife. East Lynneis the archetypal sensation novel, filled with disaster, guilt and repentance. It also documents the growing protest against the rigid roles prescribed for Victorian women. Among the many appendices included are a selection of Victorian medical views on men, women, and sexuality.
This book will be enjoyed both by readers who appreciate Ellen Wood's ghost stories and those who devour Sensation fiction. It conveys some of the uncanny atmosphere of the former while remaining as compulsively readable as Lady Audley's Secret. While it is not a Great Work of Literature, let me assure those who genuinely understand and appreciate popular fiction, and are therefore capable of distinguishing between worthwhile examples and trash, that this falls into the former category. I felt that this needed particular emphasis, in order to counteract the hideous possibility that condescending recommendations meted out by self-aggrandizing, obtuse snobs might actually succeed in influencing the perspectives of the impressionable. As for those who have already discovered for themselves that Popular Fiction and Trash are not synonymous; that, furthermore, there is no such thing as Good Trash (after all, if one likes a novel one views as trash, isn't that person bound to renounce either the enjoyment or the disapproval?); and that, most importantly, our Lasting Works of Literature have sprung from a diverse variety of arenas that span the entire range of the culture spectrum; well, maybe they understand why I was peeved enough to pen this little piece.
Disfigured text
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 26 years ago
Mrs Henry Wood's novel itself doesn't need any recommandation: generations of readers have literally devoured it. My rating however is valid only for the novel in itself.What I should like to comment upon is the edition -- and here my rating is just 2 -- published as a volume of "Everyman's Library"...The text is disfigured by dozens...of misprints -- from a philological point of view, this edition is just useless.The volume is out of print at the moment. This should be welcomed by the editors as an occasion to correct those numberless misprints. If they don't do so, there is only one comment possible on their edition: forget it.
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