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Identify Containing Books Mathilda

Title:Mathilda
Author:Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Deluxe Edition
Pages:Pages: 94 pages
Published:November 3rd 2006 by Hard Press (first published 1959)
Categories:Classics. Fiction. Gothic. Short Stories
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Mathilda Paperback | Pages: 94 pages
Rating: 3.25 | 2045 Users | 323 Reviews

Commentary Conducive To Books Mathilda

Mary Shelley is exceedingly famous as the author of Frankenstein, but this work isn't known at all and wasn't even published until 1959. With good reason.

The story is that Mathilda's father leaves England after the death of his wife and doesn't return until she is 16 whereupon he falls in love with her. He confesses it to her and then kills himself. (view spoiler)[ No hot incestuous sex scenes here, this isn't a book by Virginia Andrews) (hide spoiler)]. Mathilda is consumed with unhappiness and making financial arrangements for a secure future, fakes her own suicide and taking the money, moves to a secluded cottage on the Yorkshire moors with only a servant for company.

Her situation, the loneliness and the depressing view of the future and possibly the bleak, treeless, windswept moors get to her and she decides to really kill herself. Matilda asks her only friend, a poet to make it a romantic suicide Ă  deux and join her in drinking the poisoned beverages she has prepared.

Eloquently, not wanting to die himself, he persuades her to live. But she gets consumption and dies anyway, happy that it is a natural death and so doesn't spoil her chances of being reunited with her father in the happy hereafter. The father whose ardour for her was that of a lover, not a parent. And the daughter knows that and this desiring of with her father can only mean that she returns this unnatural affection and is looking forward to an eternity in her lover-father's arms.

Absolutely dire story, but the writing was ok.

Read March 2011.
Reviewed 2016.

Describe Books In Favor Of Mathilda

Original Title: Mathilda
ISBN: 1406914061 (ISBN13: 9781406914061)
Edition Language: English


Rating Containing Books Mathilda
Ratings: 3.25 From 2045 Users | 323 Reviews

Criticism Containing Books Mathilda
Mary Shelley is exceedingly famous as the author of Frankenstein, but this work isn't known at all and wasn't even published until 1959. With good reason. The story is that Mathilda's father leaves England after the death of his wife and doesn't return until she is 16 whereupon he falls in love with her. He confesses it to her and then kills himself. (view spoiler)[ No hot incestuous sex scenes here, this isn't a book by Virginia Andrews) (hide spoiler)]. Mathilda is consumed with unhappiness

Chilling and stunning. I enjoyed this almost as much as I did Frankenstein. It's an interesting perspective on the value of life and the influence we have on others, and the influence they have on us. Although the book is an easy read and very short, it really packs a punch and is definitely very dark.

This was just absoultely gorgeous. Everytime I read anything by Mary Shelley I just want to read everything she ever wrote, whether it was fiction or non-fiction. This was a very gothic tragic tale of a young girl doomed to death. The tale itself is interesting and tragic. The style of the writing is just beautiful. There are some of the most beautiful and moving passages about depression and suicide that I've ever read. Clearly Mary Shelley understood these things very well and while the plot

Really, really short work, virtually a one idea story that Shelley allows to go on far too long. She is reaching here for shock and sensation and melodrama (in the absence of other words beginning in S), but no doubt I'm too callous or too old or something. It's an aristocratic- Gothic tale, so while in earlier works of Gothic shlocky sensation, illicit passions were worked out to their dark and dreadful conclusions in foreign countries like Italy, or the past, the scene of the action here is

This was Mary Shelleys second work after Frankenstein, and its really interesting to see how similar it is in thematic preoccupations and how it draws on her own life: absent fathers, dead mothers, nature as parent, books as parent, very close father-daughter relationships, human society as false and corrupting, human love and kindness as essential, the city as oppressive compared to the freedom of the countryside, the pleasures and pains of solitude. (that last one in particular; Shelley writes

I've just finished re-reading Frankenstein and it reminded me how much I love the work of Mary Shelley, hence moving on to this small novella. The first part of this book is definitely stronger than the latter half which is a bit fragmented and not terribly polished in my opinion. The first part is just wonderful though - melodramatic, tragic and with all the obsession of the self which marks the typical Romantics of the period. The story commences on a blasted heath, where damaged soul Mathilda

This novella started out really good, the first 3 or 4 chapters were really enjoyable to me but once she is reunited with her father things started to go downhill. It's a shame, the story in itself is quite interesting but I just couldn't stand the over-dramatized and over-poetic dialogs and actually later on most of the writing just annoyed me. If you like that kind of literature, that's fine, but it just wasn't for me.
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