Road To Middlemarch

£18.99

Rebecca Mead was a young woman in an English coastal town when she first read George Eliot’s ‘Middlemarch’, regarded by many as the greatest English novel. The novel, which Virginia Woolf famously described as ‘one of the few English novels written for grown-up people’, offered Mead something that modern life and literature did not. In this wise and revealing work of biography, reporting, and memoir, Rebecca Mead leads us into the life that the book made for her, as well as the many lives the novel has led since it was written.

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Rebecca Mead was a young woman when she first read Middlemarch , and she has read it many times since, interpreting and discovering it anew. In The Road to Middlemarch she writes passionately about her relationship to this remarkable, much-loved Victorian novel, and shows how we can live richer and more fulfilling lives through our profound engagement with great literary works . Published when George Eliot was fifty-one, Middlemarch has at its centre one of literature’s most compelling and ill-fated marriages, and some of the most tenderly drawn characters. Its vast canvas incorporates the lives of ordinary people and their most intimate struggles. Virginia Woolf famously described it as ‘one of the few English novels written for grown-up people’, and Mead explores how the ambitions, dreams and attachments of its characters teach us to value the limitations of our ordinary lives.Interweaving readings of Middlemarch with an investigation of George Eliot’s unconventional, inspiring life and Mead’s reflections on her own youth, relationships and marriage, this is a sensitive work of deep reading and biography, for every lover of literature who cares about why we read books and how they read us.

Weight 0.4 kg
Dimensions 21 × 14.8 × 3 cm
Author

Publisher

Imprint

Cover

Hardback

Pages

293

Language

English

Edition
Dewey

823.8 (edition:23)

Readership

General – Trade / Code: K