Criticism > Nineteenth-Century Literary Criticism > Adam Bede, George Eliot - Geraldine Jewsbury (review date 1859)
Adam Bede, George Eliot - Geraldine Jewsbury (review date 1859)
Geraldine Jewsbury (review date 1859)
SOURCE: “The Athenaeum, 26 February 1859,” in George Eliot and Her Readers: A Selection of Contemporary Reviews, edited by John Holmstrom and Laurence Lerner, The Bodley Head, 1966, p. 21.
[Originally published in 1859, this early favorable review of Adam Bede recommends the novel for its realism and power.]
Adam Bede is a novel of the highest class. Full of quiet power, without exaggeration and without any strain after effect, it produces a deep impression on the reader, which remains long after the book is closed. It is as though he had made acquaintance with real human beings: the story is not a story, but a true account of a place and people who have really lived; indeed, some of them may even be living yet, though they will be rather old, but that everything happened as here set down we have no doubt in the world. The duty of a critic in the present instance is almost...
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Criticism
- Geraldine Jewsbury (review date 1859)
- W. L. Collins (review date 1859)
- Eneas Sweetland Dallas (review date 1859)
- The Westminster Review (review date 1876)
- Joseph Wiesenfarth (essay date 1972)
- Kenny Marotta (essay date 1976)
- Mason Harris (essay date 1978)
- Elizabeth Holtze (essay date 1983)
- Mason Harris (essay date 1983)
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- Peggy Fitzhugh Johnstone (essay date 1989)
- James Eli Adams (essay date 1991)
- Daniel P. Gunn (essay date 1992)
- Mark Warren McLaughlin (essay date 1994)
- Caroline Levine (essay date 1996)
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