With an Introduction and Notes by Dr Carole Jones, freelance writer and researcher. George Eliot's final novel, Daniel Deronda (1876), follows the intertwining lives of the beautiful but spoiled and selfish Gwendolene Harleth and the selfless yet alienated Daniel Deronda, as they search for personal and vocational fulfilment and sympathetic relationship. Set largely in the degenerate English aristocratic society of the 1860s, Daniel Deronda charts their search for meaningful lives against a background of imperialism, the oppression of women, and racial and religious prejudice. Gwendolen's attempts to escape a sadistic relationship and atone for past actions catalyse her friendship with Deronda, while his search for origins leads him, via Judaism, to a quest for moral growth. Eliot's radical dual narrative constantly challenges all solutions and ensures that the novel is as controversial now, as when it first appeared.
The Heart Of The Matter
Graham Greene
Vintage Books/Penguin Random House Group
Desolation Angels Penguin Modern Classics
Jack Kerouac
Penguin Random House Group
The Castle Penguin Modern Classics
Franz Kafka
The Dreaming Child Penguin Archive Series
Karen Blixen
Narcissus And Goldmund
Hermann Hesse
Bantam Books/Penguin Random House Group
Robinson Crusoe Hb Penguin Select Classics
Daniel Defoe
The Hiding Place
Trezza Azzopardi
Picador/Pan Macmillan Publishers Limited
David Copperfield Macmillan Popular Classics
Charles Dickens
Pan Macmillan Publishers Limited
The Great Gatsby Fingerprint Pocket Classics
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Fingerprint/Prakash Books India Pvt. Ltd.
Siddhartha Penguin Select Classics
Fill up your details to notify you when this book will be available