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Clarissa, or The History of a Young Lady (Classics) | 
enlarge | Author: Samuel Richardson Creator: Angus Ross Publisher: Penguin Classics Category: Book
List Price: £25.00 Buy New: £9.95 You Save: £15.05 (60%)
New (34) Used (17) from £9.95
Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 66489
Media: Paperback Edition: Reprint Pages: 1536 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.9 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 5.7 x 2.6
ISBN: 0140432159 Dewey Decimal Number: 823.6 EAN: 9780140432152 ASIN: 0140432159
Publication Date: August 29, 1985 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Ships from U.S.A., to anywhere in the United Kingdom! Orders only take 7-10 days! We specialise in service to the U.K. and only ship airmail.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 3 more reviews...
I wish it were longer! June 19, 2007 Mr. S. Dunne (Ireland) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
What an epic novel. Thoroughly engrossing from the first letter of Anna Howe to Clarissa Harlowe until the conclusion penned by the reformed Jack Belford, I loved every minute of it. Even at the last couple of pages I had my heart in my mouth awaiting the outcome of a long awaited encounter between two of the characters. I feel quite satisfied at having seen this book through to its conclusion, and was rewarded duly. One of my best reads for a very long time. (Unabridged Penguin Classics Version)
Stick with it, it's worth it! August 30, 2006 J. Ormond 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
This copy is the abridged version but it is well worth reading the full text - if you don't enjoy it at least you can feel proud that you've read a book bigger than 'War and Peace'! I found the correspondence between Anna and Clarissa amazing, Anna is such a modern girl. 'Clarissa' tells the age old story of a woman who thinks she can tame a bad boy. The scene describing Anna by Clarissa's coffin is very moving and worth sticking with the novel for.
Perhaps inadvertent feminist classic January 4, 2006 J. I. De Beresford (Farnham) 12 out of 13 found this review helpful
Well, I've just finished all 1499 pages of the unabridged version (ISBN 0-140-43215-9) based upon the first edition and not by any means the longest. The fact that I've finished it attests partly to its quality, partly to my vanity. For me, it is pleasant to see how conscious the Georgians were of the unfairness (as we would see of it) of the marriage articles and the treatment of women by men generally. I can't really be sure exactly where Richardson stood but in the character of Anne Howe you have have a very plain speaking and intelligent feminist, surely... albeit that the author has her marry a man she doesn't fancy, apparently against her inclination. Indeed, one of the novel's many problems is it's improbabilities. I personally think that the characterisation of Lovelace is quite crude, the novel suffers from a lack of humour, the heroine dies of we know not quite what..On the other hand, the novel is still a major narrative achievement that makes good use of its length to render an often more realistic portrayal of life in many details. For anyone genuinely interested in reading the "classics" this is one that perhaps shouldn't be too far down the list. And in the first third of the book I simply couldn't help but be amused by the comic barbarity of the parents. Their unreasonableness in contrast to their beforehand reasonableness to her is another glaring inconsistency but it doesn't spoil the novel.
Excellent book - but don't you want the non abridged version April 9, 2005 8 out of 10 found this review helpful
I just thought i'd point out to other buyers that the edition shown here is not in fact the whole book - it's abridged which i don't think is made clear. i only found out when i ordered it having read a library copy of the non abridged version which i can't recommend enough!
Caveat before tackling this great but weighty novel August 15, 2000 Klytemnestra (UK) 33 out of 36 found this review helpful
I have to confess to reading this novel partly out of guilt, since I kept coming across references to it elsewhere. While I did enjoy it, it was largely this literary conscience that kept me going. It is indeed a superb novel, and you can read the other reviews to see why, but it is very slow and I think I'm not the only one who found it quite a slog, or got frustrated from time to time by Clarissa's unspeakable virtuousness (although her distraught state after the rape is portrayed most movingly). As a comparison, read Laclos' Les Liaisons Dangereuses, one of my favourite novels and one which makes one wonder why the epistolary form was abandoned. A beautifully structured, enthralling study of sexual intrigue in eighteenth-century France, it is far more exciting and the characterisation is extraordinary, exploring both good and vicious characters with great depth and achieving the rare feat of making characters at both ends of the scale human, realistic and sympathetic. One of the main differences, apart from the driven plot of Les Liaisons against the thoughtful consideration of what in Clarissa is, classically, basically an expansion of one incident, is that Laclos explored human depravity with such rigorous honesty and fascinated sympathy that he caused a great scandal and got himself banned; Richardson, on the other hand, always had an eye out for the moral lesson (he gives everyone their just deserts at the end in quite a scrupulous manner) and to my mind his portrayal of human nature is less believable, and certainly less interesting. Clarissa would have been far more likeable for a few faults (even Melanie in Gone with the Wind makes a sarcastic comment once), and the interaction with Lovelace would perhaps, I feel, have been deeper and more tragic if she had lowered her standards and communicated with him more. Clarissa is a densely woven, lovingly detailed novel with a plot that can be summed up in one sentence, and I think that whether it appeals to you depends very much on whether or not this is to your taste. I certainly found it of great interest in relation to other literature and will no doubt dip into it again, but I couldn't face a re-read. One problem with boasting about having finished it is that even though it was much harder work than War and Peace (and twice as long), most people won't have heard of it!
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