Reviews

Adam Bede by George Eliot

perjacxis's review against another edition

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3.0

Oh Hetty!

zpuacz's review

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emotional reflective slow-paced

3.5

soniapage's review against another edition

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4.0

Not only a tragic story but also a close study of rural life. The characters are fully developed and we see so many likenesses to people today.

andersenhannah02's review against another edition

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5.0

George Eliot is a fantastic writer and I am so glad that I got the chance to read this. I have so many mixed feelings, and I am honestly not sure what to think about the ending. I highly recommend you give this a try, and I would love to hear your thoughts.

bupdaddy's review against another edition

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3.0

I was likin' this book pretty well, what with all the slamming on them Methodists and their humble dress and whatnot, but the end wrapped up too prettily.

Specifically, Dinah had the hots for Adam for so long, and he'd never thought of her. The day he finds out she likes him, he's head-over-heels totally soul-mates 4ever! And he has to convince her to marry him, without me being convinced of why he'd suddenly love her and not be looking on the rebound for the next hot thing that's right under his nose.

And conveniently, Hetty died in the last couple of sentences in passing, very obligingly, and besides it'd be totally AWKWARD for her to still be around while Adam and Dinah make sho 'nuff hot luv.

Still, I liked it OK. Eliot has a decent sense of humor, and the story was interesting enough, if artificial in the unwinding.

becca_g_powell's review against another edition

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5.0

Just lovely. I'm always amazed at Eliot's gift of making words work together in impossibly perfect ways. She knows how to write a sentence, and this book is full of them. It's absolutely beautiful. Beware if you read books for plot - It will take you a few hundred pages to get to a really interesting one. Instead, just take your time and soak up the pastoral imagery and poetic phrases. The story will be interesting enough when you get to it, but it takes a true craftsman to draw her reader deep into her book even while nothing much is going on.

hannah_greendale's review against another edition

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dark emotional sad slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

ianl1963's review against another edition

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3.0

I will have to read now, as wiki appears to cast doubt on the BBC adaptation. Dinah Morris and Adam Bede appear to be rather smug and pious; in their different ways, in the BBC offering. Here is hoping the read is not a let down.

sharanyasarathy's review against another edition

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4.0

Ok finally decided to review now that I've forgotten all my thoughts about this book lol

Pros
Eliot uses beautiful writing to get the reader deeply invested in the hopes, dreams, fears, desires, etc. of a myriad of characters in the English rustic village that is observing both the Napoleonic wars and the Industrial Revolution from afar. Although there is a fair bit of social and religious commentary, primarily around feminism, class issues, and the like, it does not feel sermonizing (except of course for the literal sermons by Dinah and the Methodists) or patronizing. I felt so badly for Hetty and Adam and Seth even while seeing their flaws clearly (and really disliking Hetty in general whoops)

Cons
1. It's hard for me to get behind the extremely fervent evangelist female characters that Eliot seems fond of writing (Dinah, Dorothea). On the character flaw front... also did not understand the point of the old crotchety bachelor who says extremely offensive things about women (and I can't even remember his name so what was he really adding to the book)
2. A critique that Henry James had about Middlemarch that I scoffed at was that Eliot inserted herself too much as the omniscient author/narrator with an agenda into the flow of the book. Unfortunately, I feel that critique does hold true to Adam Bede, but all in all not horrible.

I highly recommend this book! As my Eliot ratings go here is the order:
1. Middlemarch
2. Adam Bede
3. The Mill on the Floss

avieherman's review against another edition

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4.0

I think it's really weird that Seth is in love with and proposing to Dinah and then two seconds (more like two years) later, Adam is in love with and proposing to her (and Seth really doesn't seem to care!). So that kind of ruined it for me.... Perhaps ruined is a rather strong word, but maybe, made it not my most favouritest book in the world?