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Love and Mr. Lewisham by H.G. Wells
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Love and Mr. Lewisham (1900)

by H.G. Wells

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294989,376 (3.63)30
Classic Literature. Fiction. HTML:

One of H. G. Wells' first ventures outside of the science fiction realm, the novel Love and Mr. Lewisham was published in the year 1900. Seeking love rather than his youthful hopes of fame and glory, Mr. Lewisham moves to the city of London where he becomes convinced of the merits of socialism and gets involved in the spiritual charlatanism of that later Victorian era.

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Member:Henk
Title:Love and Mr. Lewisham
Authors:H.G. Wells
Info:Thomas Nelson and Sons
Collections:Your library
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Tags:prose

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Love and Mr. Lewisham by H. G. Wells (1900)

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https://fromtheheartofeurope.eu/love-and-mr-lewisham-by-h-g-wells/

Another unexpectedly enjoyable Wells novel, a young man who finds that he has to make a choice between two women having already married one of them (not a situation that Wells himself was unfamiliar with), at the same time as dealing with embourgeoisement and the tension between ideals and reality. Quite short, totally credible, would probably make a terrible film. ( )
  nwhyte | Oct 1, 2023 |
Although this was a rapid departure from what I am used to with H.G Wells (mainly his science fiction) I was quite impressed at what this short novel has to offer. The writing is good, the story thorough and appealing, and the characters full of sentiment, regrets, hopes, and wishes. They are mixed all together in a palatable way and the story felt fluid all the way through. For those interested in H.G Wells, English literature, and novels like these I recommend it. You won't be disappointed.

4 stars. ( )
  DanielSTJ | Apr 25, 2020 |
'Natural Selection – it follows . . . this way is happiness . . . must be. There can be no other.'
     He sighed 'To last a lifetime, that is.
     'And yet – it is almost as if Life had played me a trick – promised so much – given so little! . . .
     'No! One must not look at it in that way! That will not do! That will
not do.' (207)

This is the earliest (I think) of Wells's umpteen novels about scientists and marriage; it would be followed by Ann Veronica (1909) and Marriage [duh] (1911-12). Like a lot of Wells's literary novels, it tracks Wells's own life fairly well in some regards: George Edgar Lewisham is a science student trying to rise through the social classes and also maintain a marriage and also advance the cause of socialism. He also teaches, and he falls in love with a student's cousin, Ethel, and has to figure out how to balance the needs of a spouse with those of career. Also he's got a classmate who might be more his intellectual match than Ethel, and is clearly in love with him. So, similar ground to both Ann Veronica and Marriage (like the Traffords in Marriage, the Lewishams struggle even more because of the artificial requirements society places on them, like the need to by certain kinds of nice things and so on).

Wells will never be the world's most moving writer. He's good at depicting the interiority of aspiration in conflict with the exteriority of the social world, but it's always more of an intellectual feeling, as opposed to how Thomas Hardy or George Eliot can hit you in the gut with similar subject matter. But it is a pleasant read, and there's some black humour, and some familiar problems to anyone who's ever gone on the job market, and some real-feeling awkwardness of early married life. Lewisham is a scientist (or he would be one, anyway), and there's this weird subplot about Ethel's involvement in faking séances, though Wells kind of sews this all together with pointing out that there are different kinds of cheating, and different kinds of belief.

An interesting book, I thought it was less good and polished than Wells's later literary fiction, but it's still heart-rending in its own way. My quotation above comes from the final chapter, where Lewisham realizes that he and Ethel are having a baby, and thus his scientific and political career aspirations will probably go unfulfilled. I don't know what to make of it, and I like that I don't know. Lewisham is desperately trying to convince himself that it's a good thing to have a child, even though it appears nowhere in his "Schema," but even as he keeps repeating to himself that the coming child means "the end of empty dreams" (208), you can tell he doesn't believe it, and that he will miss those dreams. He tears up his Schema and thus his past self-- and something dies in him in that moment, and that's where the book ends. Lewisham has reproductive success, but nothing else. Evolution is the thing he studies, but its methods (i.e., reproduction) will foreclose his ability to study it, and destroy the other kinds of success he had valued. But at the same time, you (probably) want him to have a child because it's what so many of us value! So Lewisham's values conflict with yours even as you empathize with him, and they conflict with the world he seeks to change, but he never can. It's a quietly tragic end to a genial book.
1 vote Stevil2001 | Sep 14, 2018 |
I liked this little known Wells very much. Such a sense of being poor in 1890s London. ( )
1 vote laurenbufferd | Nov 14, 2016 |
Excellent story of a young scholar whose prospects are derailed by love and marriage. ( )
  lisahistory | Apr 16, 2016 |
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
H. G. Wellsprimary authorall editionscalculated
Beer, GillianIntroductionsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
James, Simon J.Editorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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Classic Literature. Fiction. HTML:

One of H. G. Wells' first ventures outside of the science fiction realm, the novel Love and Mr. Lewisham was published in the year 1900. Seeking love rather than his youthful hopes of fame and glory, Mr. Lewisham moves to the city of London where he becomes convinced of the merits of socialism and gets involved in the spiritual charlatanism of that later Victorian era.

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