I've never read any
Thomas Hardy before now, despite recommendations from my Mum and my big sister. I have always loved the TV adaptations - usually on the BBC on a Sunday - but had assumed that the books would be heavy going! How wrong I was.
The Mayor of Casterbridge, which I read as an Ebook on my Kindle, is not, admittedly, a laugh a minute - tragedy abounds throughout the tome - and yet, you do get drawn into the life of Michael Henchard, and find yourself empathising with a man whose life has a roller-coster aspect - mostly due to his own impulsive nature. From a shocking start where he "sells" his wife and daughter while under the influence of drink - he turns his life around and becomes a successful businessman and the respected Mayor of the small town of Casterbridge. But 20 years later, his past finally catches up with him with the reappearance of the two women he'd left behind in his youth. After a peaceful start to his "second chance", things start to unravel. There are twists and turns aplenty and I really did enjoy this book so much more than I thought I would. I will certainly be reading more Hardy ... bring on Tess of the d'Urbevilles!
Hope you like this cracking portrait of the author - splendid moustache sir, I must say! I would give this book a FOUR STAR rating.
The stats bit:
Length: 400 print pages (depending on the edition).
Price I paid: £0.00 (free on the Kindle).
Other formats available in: print; abridged audio cassette; unabridged audio CD; abridged audio download.
Yay, at last! I think Hardy is a great writer - not a laugh a minute I grant you, but what characterisation and psycological realism. Very different from Dickens, for those who fear and lump all so called Classics together. There are some still shocking developments in plot in some of his novels I've read, but I know he's not fashionable. Poetry pretty good too. And, of course, the 'tache....
ReplyDelete