The Mayor of Casterbridge: Introduction by Craig Raine [Hardcover]

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  • Category: Books (Fiction)
  • Author:  Hardy, Thomas
  • Author:  Hardy, Thomas
  • ISBN-10:  0679420355
  • ISBN-10:  0679420355
  • ISBN-13:  9780679420354
  • ISBN-13:  9780679420354
  • Publisher:  Everyman's Library
  • Publisher:  Everyman's Library
  • Pages:  400
  • Pages:  400
  • Binding:  Hardcover
  • Binding:  Hardcover
  • Pub Date:  01-Jun-1993
  • Pub Date:  01-Jun-1993
  • SKU:  0679420355-11-SPLV
  • SKU:  0679420355-11-SPLV
  • Item ID: 101212526
  • List Price: $30.00
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The Mayor of Casterbridge is a man haunted by his past. In his youth he betrayed his wife and baby daughter in a shocking incident that led him to swear never to touch alcohol again for twenty-one years. He has since risen from his humble origins to become a respected pillar of the community in Casterbridge, but his secrets cannot stay hidden forever.

Thomas Hardy’s almost supernatural insight into the course of wayward lives, his instinctive feeling for the beauty of the rural landscape, and his power to invest that landscape with moral significance all came together in an utterly fluent way inThe Mayor of Casterbridge.

A classically shaped story about the rise and fall of the brooding and sometimes brutal Michael Henchard in the harsh world of nineteenth-century rural England,The Mayor of Casterbridgeis an emblematic product of Hardy’s maturity–vigorous, forceful, and unclouded by illusions.

The Mayor of Casterbridgeis a novel about Henchard’s ‘struggle into love and the struggle with love’ . . . Hardy is clearly an expert in moods and maps out the terrain . . . like a writer who knows the emotional landscape intimately.” –from the Introduction by Craig RaineThomas Hardy, whose writing immortalized the Wessex countryside and dramatized his sense of the inevitable tragedy of life, was born at Upper Bockhampton, near Stinsford in Dorset in 1840, the eldest child of a prosperous stonemason. As a youth he trained as an architect and in 1862 obtained a post in London. During his time he began seriously to write poetry, which remained his first literary love and his last. In 1867-68, his first novel was refused publication, butUnder the Greenwood Tree (1872), his first Wessex novel, did well enough to convince him to continue writing. In 1874, Far from the Madding Crowd, published serially and anonymously in the Cornhill Magazine, became al“

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