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The Ways of the Hour by James Fenimore Cooper
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The Ways of the Hour

by James Fenimore Cooper

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181309,109 (3.5)None
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Although well-versed in historic literature and well-used to putting ideas and attitudes in context, I found this novel particularly irritating on two counts: 1) its long, frequent and repetitive diatribes against the changes in the legal code that had been instituted shortly before the novel was written (1840s), and 2) its didactic and patronising anti-feminist diatribes that become more frequent and repetitive towards the end of the novel and which condemn an intelligent and spirited young woman for the strain of lunatic independence in her character. ( )
  MurphyTowers | Jun 7, 2008 |
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Amazon.com Book Description (ISBN 0750911581, Paperback)

The Ways of the Hour was James Fenimore Cooper's last novel, published in 1850. Set in a rural New York county seat outside New York City, it is a courtroom drama of a woman accused of murder and theft, and of the men and women who defend her case. The surprise ending is perhaps as unexpected as any in crime fiction. Cooper used the novel, among other things, to express his discontent with changes in New York State's judicial system during the 1840s, with the corruption of courts and juries, and with new ideas of women's rights. The accused woman, Mary Monson, is a notable character in her own right. The Ways of the Hour should be considered a classic in the history of the mystery novel -- as it is perhaps the first novel to revolve almost entirely about a courtroom murder trial.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:01 -0400)

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