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The Mill on the Floss
Contributor(s): Eliot, George (Author)
ISBN: 1539132617     ISBN-13: 9781539132615
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
OUR PRICE:   $19.23  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: September 2016
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Fiction | Literary
- Fiction | Classics
Lexile Measure: 840
Physical Information: 0.85" H x 6" W x 9" (1.21 lbs) 414 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
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Maggie Tulliver is the central character of the book. The story begins when she is 9 years old, 13 years into her parents' marriage. Her relationship with her older brother Tom, and her romantic relationships with Philip Wakem (a hunchbacked, sensitive, and intellectual friend) and with Stephen Guest (a vivacious young socialite in St. Ogg's and assumed fianc of Maggie's cousin Lucy Deane) constitute the most significant narrative threads.

Tom and Maggie have a close yet complex bond, which continues throughout the novel. Their relationship is colored by Maggie's desire to recapture the unconditional love her father provides before his death. Tom's pragmatic and reserved nature clashes with Maggie's idealism and fervor for intellectual gains and experience....

Maggie wants to save her family from financial ruin, but she's uneducated, so she doesn't know how. She wants to open herself up to friendship, but family grudges prevent her. She wants to follow the man she loves, but in doing so she will betray her best friends and be rejected entirely by her society.

The theme of the story is a struggle between passion (personified by Maggie) and duty (personified by her brother, Tom). Maggie absolutely lives and breathes for Tom's love and approval. However, if she follows her heart and her passions, her brother rejects her... in fact, he literally hates her (and tells her so). On the other hand, if she stifles her own desires and surrenders her very self to duty, she is miserable. And Tom still doesn't give her any credit.

The novel is also cool because it's sort of a novel about adultery without actually being about adultery. It feels very modern and unflinching, the more so because George Eliot actually spent much of her adult life in a happy but socially-isolating relationship out of wedlock, so she had perspective on The System.

The Mill on the Floss is moving and philosophical. Eliot does so many different things well; she's witty and detached, and then she writes a love scene that makes your knees go wobbly.

The nearby village of St Oggs and the River Floss in Lincolnshire are fictional.

Maggie Tulliver is one of the most engaging and endearing heroines that you will encounter in Victorian fiction.

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