I liked how Thomas Hardy sort of preserved, in words, the old ways of the English Rural Folk.
This is precisely why I would like to get to like Hardy's novels but worried reading them will have me reaching for the Valium, whiskey and razor blades.
I liked how Thomas Hardy sort of preserved, in words, the old ways of the English Rural Folk.
P.S. Suggestions for non-Hardy classics that are worth reading are also wlecome.
If you want a more upbeat telling of the change in rural life a century later, you can always try Laurie Lee's 'Cider with Rosie'. Another novelist-and-poet, as it happens.This is precisely why I would like to get to like Hardy's novels but worried reading them will have me reaching for the Valium, whiskey and razor blades.
Silas Marner is a particular favourite of mine, very easy to read, and a lovely story.Another author covering the same period is George Eliot and I would argue that despite being written a couple of decades earlier her books are more influential, more modern in outlook and altogether more enjoyable to read.
Get a kindle, many classics including FFTMC are freeLooks like Far from the Maddening Crowd then. Time to hit the charity shops. I still my Tess somewhere in mylibrarybig pile of books crammed into the bottom of my wardrobe.