
The Odd Women
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Buy Now for £22.99
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Narrated by:
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Juliet Stevenson
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By:
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George Gissing
About this listen
"What is more vulgar than the ideal of novelists? In real life, how many men and women fall in love?" So says Rhoda Nunn, George Gissing's formidable heroine. Through a gripping and thought-provoking story, Gissing presents the reality for Victorian women: a society in which marriage is judged to be the only acceptable way forward. His perspective is strikingly sympathetic for its time, and as such the novel has an exhilarating freshness far removed from the contemporary sentimental romantics.
The young Monica Madden cries for two days before her marriage to Edmund Widdowson; the ensuing claustrophobia, which opens the door for the more desirable Bevis, contrasts with Rhoda's independence - yet Rhoda's own principles are tested when she falls in love rather by accident....
The Odd Women is a remarkable book, ultimately optimistic in its hope for a societal shift that will benefit both men and women alike.
PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying PDF will be available in your Audible Library along with the audio.
Public Domain (P)2020 Naxos AudioBooksThe Victorians: familiar and yet quite strange
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Women’s lot in the late 19th century.
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Brilliant dissection of 19th Century marriage
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Perfect audiobook
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Gissing's own two disastrous marriages to working class women permeate his representation of marriage. The two strong single women Rhoda and Mary disdain young girls' determination to marry in order toe escape this seeming 'half-life'; together they run a charitable group teaching young women life skills such as typing which will enable them to make fulfilling contented lives of the mind for themselves, independent of husbands and what Rhoda calls the 'shame' of marriage. The ideal marriage of intellect and mutual respect remains an unattainable ideal. The only happy marriage in the novel is a mere footnote in the story: but even the Micklethwaites living contentedly with the wife's blind sister have achieved their domestic happiness only after 20 years of waiting to marry until they were 'worn' and 'lined,' all for 'want of money'.
The main focus is on Monica, at 21 the youngest of 3 worn down, parentless sisters eking out their working half lives on 3/6 a week for food. Determined to escape this grim future, Monica accepts the unhealthily persistent and possessive Mr Widdowson whom she doesn't love and is twice her age, but who owns a house in Herne Hill. Life following the 'gloomy' and 'bloodless' marriage ceremony is predictably tragic and painful, a microcosm of many such misallied marriages.
There's a great deal more in the other complex strands of the novel as Gissing plays out the issues facing this particular class of women at this time bound by social position, convention and money (or the lack of it) struggling to make meaningful and tolerably happy lives for themselves.
It all sounds rather bleak, but Gissing tackles issues live today even though society has changed, and the whole is engrossing, insightful and powerful - and beautifully read by Juliet Stevenson.
"The Clank of the Chain"?
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A book for our times
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Absolutely loved this book!
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At times it read more like a treatise than a novel and as a result some of the characters were lacking in three-dimensionality.
Surprisingly, Juliet Stevenson’s narration irritated me at times as she seemed to put on a ‘baby voice’ for some of the women, but otherwise ok.
Certainly an interesting book.
Early Feminism
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the book is interesting, but the tone of narration is irritating
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