Women in Love

No cover

D. H. Lawrence: Women in Love (EBook, 2004, NuVision Publications)

eBook

English language

Published Jan. 7, 2004 by NuVision Publications.

ISBN:
978-1-59547-358-5
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
56112819

View on OpenLibrary

3 stars (7 reviews)

Two sisters, Ursula and Gudrun Brangwen, and their relationships dominate the novel. Ursula, a teacher herself, is in love with the school inspector Rupert Birkin who is initially involved with Hermione Roddice (a dominating lady with whom he is not happy). Gerard Crich, a friend of Birkin, is the other main character. He is weighted down by the deaths that have occurred in his family (he accidentally caused his brother's death at an early age and feels guilty when his sister too dies, by drowning). Gerard takes over the running of the mine from his father but his initially strong position is weakened by his relationship with Gudrun that in time is made difficult by an emptiness in Gerard. Ursula and Rupert, meanwhile, are married, and the novel continues to explore their happier relationship. Gerard and Gudrun are torn apart by sorrow and the latter's flirting with the sculptor Loerke …

99 editions

reviewed Women in love by D. H. Lawrence (The Cambridge edition of the works of D.H. Lawrence)

A slog!

3 stars

I'm glad I did persevere to finish this book, although there were several times when I felt like giving up, that I was putting in a lot of effort for minimal reward.

I found the relationship between Gerald and Birkin to be the high point of this book. Their conversations seemed to me to be the most alive, whereas those between the women and these men were frequently repetitive and overly melodramatic. And, to be honest, I struggled to understand what the sisters Ursula and Gudrun actually found attractive in either man. However Lawrence's view of the roles of women and men are very much of a time and of a class and, as such, it was interesting to discover his perspective.

reviewed Women in love by D. H. Lawrence (Penguin great books of the 20th century)

Review of 'Women in love' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Took quite a while to finish. Similar thematically to Lady Chatterly’s Lover in some regards…however far more sweeping in its implicit claims about romantic and fraternal love. A lot to unpack here, and perhaps a monumentally important work in which the author’s insights subtly work their way into your mind until, by the end, you feel you’ve had a vague epiphany that requires you to sit back and digest the essence and work out the logic.

avatar for ChadGayle

rated it

4 stars
avatar for Shtakser

rated it

3 stars
avatar for SuzyS

rated it

1 star
avatar for TimMason

rated it

3 stars