A review by elle_aline
Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier

dark mysterious tense slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? N/A
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.0

It is so difficult to rate this book or even to form an opinion on it, as it was the first English classic I've read in English itself. 

I certainly liked it a lot, that for sure. But I don't think I loved it.


The mystery keeps you on your toes constantly, rendering me unable to stop reading even though it was such a difficult book because of the language.
It makes you believe you know what's going to happen only to turn on you. I wholeheartedly believed that Maxim loved Rebecca. I also fell for the pregnancy, although I had a short moment of doubt.
I had guessed that Rebecca cheated on Maxim in that cabin and he caught her there and murderered her. This was quite early in the book. This is surprisingly close to truth and yet so wrong. Later, when Mrs. De Winter talked to Mrs. Danvers and Rebecca's affairs were revealed I thought it couldn't be the cheating, perhaps it was related to Rebecca being pregnant and aborting it. Again, close to the truth. 
That's the way a mystery book has to go for me. Making me guess enough to feel like I know what's coming and then shocking me with how close I was.

I still don't know how to feel about Mr. De winter. From the beginning I greatly disliked him and saw him of a prime example of grooming.
Again, she is 21 and he is 42. He is quite literally double her age. 
He showed all those dangerous signs of grooming, like how he selfishly married the lady despite his acknowledgement that she was too young and that she would be unhappy. He knows she could love younger men, but he disregards it out of his own wish to marry her.
How he didn't want a wedding because *he* had had one, selfishly ignoring that the lady might want one. 
Their marriage felt more or less like Maxim bought the lady's companionship off of Mrs. Van hopper. Like he heard that one can buy companionship and thought he might do it himself. 
These were my thoughts at their marriage and now looking back on it, after reading the afterword, it rings truer than I thought. 
Maxim continues on being an awful husband. Infantilizing her in every waking moment, not helping her in any way. He bascially drops her off at manderely left to her own devices. He doesn't help her adjust in the slightest, instead treats her like a pet (herself feeling so), leaves her out of everything and barely talks to her.

After the reveal that he did NOT love rebecca and truly "loves" the lady, it all turns over. Both the lady's relief and my own relief shadowed his previous behaviors, after all i wanted her to be happy. Yet i was not quite happy and now I think my first assessment of him may not have been so wrong.
He may have not loved Rebecca, but does it make him any less of a groomer and bad husband?

Now to Mrs. De winter.
We don't know her name, of course. I feel like there's little to add to the analysis of her in the afterword.
I certainly liked living in her world. I would never live and be like her, but I enjoyed her. Woefully daydreaming, about pretty much everything. Her obsession with Rebecca. 
She also got over herself enough to not make her passiveness aggravating. E.g. talking to Frank, coming down to the ball.

Rebecca was... well she was Rebecca. 

The writing was very beautiful.

All in all it was a page turning mystery i quite enjoyed.
It just lacked *something* for me.