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About the Author

Includes the name: Grace. Acuilar

Image credit: Project Gutenberg

Works by Grace Aguilar

The Days of Bruce (2006) 23 copies
The women of Israel (1994) 19 copies
The Mother's Recompence (1888) 13 copies
Essays and miscellanies (2012) 3 copies

Associated Works

The Apocalypse Reader (2007) — Contributor — 207 copies, 4 reviews
Victorian Love Stories: An Oxford Anthology (1996) — Contributor — 53 copies, 1 review
The Schocken Book of Modern Sephardic Literature (2005) — Contributor — 32 copies
Nineteenth-Century Women Poets: An Oxford Anthology (1996) — Contributor — 29 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Aguilar, Grace
Birthdate
1816-06-02
Date of death
1847-09-16
Gender
female
Occupations
poet
novelist
teacher
theologian
translator
Nationality
UK
Birthplace
Hackney, London, England, UK
Places of residence
Brighton, Sussex, England, UK
Place of death
Frankfurt am Main, Germany
Associated Place (for map)
England, UK

Members

Reviews

1 review
Aguilar’s style and even sentence structure seemed stilted and unnatural. The dialogue in particular failed to portray actual human speech, rather it sounded like so many set pieces.
"The Perez Family" and "The Escape" both came across as too good to be true. The Perez Family especially had far too much of the predictability of problems in sit-coms which reliably are solved neatly with every one emerging a little bit wiser as the entire extended family draws closer together. When combined show more with the forced dialogue mentioned above, these morality melodramas cloy rather than entertain or instruct.
In both "The Escape" and "The Perez Family", I could not help being reminded of Voltaire’s Candide. These works may be seen as anti-Candide in that The Es-cape and Candide both prominently feature the Lisbon earthquake of 1755 yet with wildly different, completely opposite results. In addition, both show the con-ditions of Christians and Jews in Portugal at the time. Moreover, Candide, Cu-negonde and the rest of the gang from Westphalia find themselves always doing the right things but forever being punished by irrational and impersonal quirks of happenstance, while the Aguilar’s characters find themselves in the hands of a loving and personal deity who frequently and bounteously repays their love and loyalty with material compensation. I feel sure Aguilar’s writings would have made Voltaire’s head spin.
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½

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Statistics

Works
23
Also by
4
Members
163
Popularity
#129,734
Rating
2.9
Reviews
1
ISBNs
30

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