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Loading... Thomas Hardy: The Time-torn Manby Claire Tomalin (otherwise under Claire Tomalin)
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Claire Tomalin again does a fine job of biographic research telling us all about 'Tom and Em' .She describes two unhappy marriage partners. Another masterly biography from Claire Tomalin, a much more engaging read than her Pepys one. I knew next to nothing about Hardy but Tomalin's book led me into his life and world through her excellent signature style of warm, compassionate writing with particular insights into the emotionally stunted lives of Emma and Florence, his two wives. Hugely recommended. As is usual with Claire Tomalin biographies this is a wonderful evocation of a life. She deals with Hardy's complexity both as a man and a writer without ever being judgemental. It is hard to reconcile the man who wrote to Rider Haggard, 'sympathy with you both in your bereavement. Though, to be candid, I think the death of a child is never to be regretted, when one reflects on what he has escaped.' with the man who wrote such wonderful poetry in mourning of his first wife. Emma Hardy is a fascinating character in her own right and one who it seems has been unfairly demonised throughout the years, Tomalin writes that 'she had many faults, but her courage was unflinching and she remained stoic.' I love how Tomalin has used his great poetry throughout her text and I shall be searching out my collection of Hardy's poetry for a reread. I Becaus of the great satisfaction I derived from reading Claire Tomalin's biography of Pepys and despite the fact that I have read at least three other biographies of Hardy, when I heard of this work I wanted to read it. It is masterfully done, and reads very easily. Hardy's life is amazingly interesting, and one gets the idea that Tomalin has recorded it with good insight. This work pays more attention to his poetry than some others, and I was fortunate to have a volume of all his poems at hand as I read, so I could read any poem mentioned if it seemed I should. And I have decided I will read at least one Hardy novel I have not read; I believe A Pair of Blue Eyes, published in 1873.
Claire Tomalin's biography, admirable particularly in filling in the separate settings of Dorset and London, allows the curious reader to muse for many hours on the relationship between life and fiction, between poetry and the novel. One returns to Thomas Hardy with renewed pleasure and surprise.
References to this work on external resources.
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:01 -0400)
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Hardy is quite a difficult man to capture but Claire Tomalin succeeds. (