A review by bekrecka
Clarissa: Or the History of a Young Lady by Samuel Richardson

3.0

This was an intriguing listen. There are no redeemable characters in the whole story. The heroine, Clarissa, seems headstrong enough at refusing to compromise on her ideals (good), but still maintains a weak outlook on her situation. She essentially spends the entire story waiting on someone else to save her. I kept thinking, if she’s strong minded enough to forsake her family and her duties, shouldn't she be strong minded enough to get the eff out on her own? I also couldn't understand why she wanted her family’s favor so badly… even in the period time of the novel. Usually I’m pretty great about giving leeway to “that’s just how society was back then”, but those people were assholes! Clarissa ultimately blames herself instead of her judgmental, supposedly loving, family. Lovelace is a sociopathic bastard… and actually, my favorite character in the story. (Let’s not analyze what that says about me.) He was cunning, and malicious throughout the story, and (much like Clarissa) stayed true to his (albeit totally misogynistic) ideals. For him, this is a revenge story, and his role in it made it fascinating to listen to… it also doesn't hurt that Lovelace was played by Richard Armitage. I’m glad I have it, and will listen to it again for sure… though I’m not sure it’s something I can wholeheartedly recommend.