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(Mass Market Paperback - REISSUE)
Average Customer Rating:
(132 ratings)
The Scarlet Letter is the story of three New England settlers at odds with the puritan society in which they live. Roger Chillingworth, an aging scholar, arrives in New England after two years' separation from his wife Hester to find her on trial for adultery. For refusing to reveal her lover's identity, she is condemned to wear a letter 'A' sewn onto her clothes. Roger resolves to discover and destroy the man who has stolen his honor.
For the next seven years the participants in this bizarre love triangle privately suffer the consequences of betrayal, cowardice, and humiliation. Slowly but surely, the need for redemption grows in each as the story hastens toward its dramatic close. The Scarlet Letter is Nathaniel Hawthorne's masterpiece.
The handsome volumes in The Collectors Library present great works of world literature in a handy hardback format. Printed on high-quality paper and bound in real cloth, each complete and unabridged volume has a specially commissioned afterword, brief biography of the author and a further-reading list. This easily accessible series offers readers the perfect opportunity to discover, or rediscover, some of the world's most endearing literary works.
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In early colonial Massachusetts, a young woman endures the consequences of her sin of adultery and spends the rest of her life in atonement.
More Reviews and Recommendations"Words -- so innocent and powerless as they are, as standing in a dictionary, how potent for good and evil they become in the hands of one who knows how to combine them," Nathaniel Hawthorne once reflected. Hawthorne's own words indeed had an undeniable power. Author of The Scarlet Letter and originator of the American short story, Hawthorne left an indelible impression on literature that would influence his fellow writers into the next century.
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Number of Reviews: 132
Average Rating:
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Boring for reader, but excellent for student
A reviewer, A reviewer, 10/01/2008
It will be one of the most pointless books you will read if you read it for fun. But, if you are a student you will get a lot of it: symbolism, puritan perspective, and a human story. I don't think your friends should read it but I do think your students should
Also recommended: The Crucible by Arthur Miller
The most pointless and wierdest book ever created
A reviewer, a writer in san diego, 08/15/2008
I seriously do not think Nathaniel Hawthorne was sober when he wrote this book. I mean seriously, the book had no point, and its meaningless descriptions of the background and 'The Black Man', and such, were truly painful. I had to read it for a school assignment, and fell asleep an average of 2.3 times every time i read it, for 3.4 hours. (Actually calculated the stats). Plus, i started crying once, because it was so boring and pointless.
More Customer Reviews![Photo courtesy Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division [LC-USZ62-2358]](http://images.barnesandnoble.com/pImages/writers/images/HawthorneNathaniel_1l.jpg)
Name:
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Date of Birth:
July 04, 1804
Place of Birth:
Salem, Massachusetts
Date of Death
May 19, 1864
Place of Death
Plymouth, New Hampshire
Education:
Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine, 1824
Nathaniel Hathorne, Jr., was born into an established New England puritan family on Independence Day, 1804, in Salem, Massachusetts. After the sudden death of his father, he and his mother and sisters moved in with his mother's family in Salem. Nathaniel's early education was informal; he was home-schooled by tutors until he enrolled in Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine.
Uninterested in conventional professions such as law, medicine, or the ministry, Nathaniel chose instead to rely "for support upon my pen." After graduation, he returned to his hometown, wrote short stories and sketches, and chanced the spelling of his surname to "Hawthorne." Hawthorne's coterie consisted of transcendentalist thinkers, including Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau. Although he did not subscribe entirely to the group's philosophy, he lived for six months at Brook Farm, a cooperative living community the transcendentalists established in West Roxbury, Massachusetts.
On July 9, 1942, Hawthorne married a follower of Emerson, Sophia Peabody, with whom he had a daughter, Una, and a son, Julian. The couple purchased a mansion in Concord, Massachusetts, that previously had been occupied by author Louisa May Alcott. Frequently in financial difficulty, Hawthorne worked at the custom houses in Salem and Boston to support his family and his writing. His peaceful life was interrupted when his college friend, Franklin Pierce, now president of the United States, appointed him U.S. consul at Liverpool, England, where he served for four years.
The publication of The Scarlet Letter in 1850 changed the way society viewed Puritanism. Considered his masterpiece, the novel focuses on Hawthorne's recurrent themes of sin, guilt, and punishment. Some critics have attributed his sense of guilt to his ancestors' connection with the persecution of Quakers in seventeenth-century New England and their prominent role in the Salem witchcraft trials in the 1690s.
On May 19, 1864, Hawthorne died in Plymouth, New Hampshire, leaving behind several unfinished novels that were published posthumously. He is buried at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Concord, Massachusetts.
Author biography from the Barnes & Noble Classics edition of The Scarlet Letter.
Hawthorne's birth name was actually Nathaniel Hathorne. It's rumored that he added a "w" to avoid being associated with his Puritan grandfather, Judge Hathorne -- who presided over the Salem Witch Trials.
Among Hawthorne's peers at Maine's Bowdoin College: author Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and Franklin Pierce, who would later become the country's 14th president.
In its first week of publication, The Scarlet Letter sold 4,000 copies.
Hawthorne died on May 19, 1864, at the Pemigewasset House in Plymouth, New Hampshire. Ironically, former president Franklin Pierce had advised him to go there for his health.
Hawthorne's masterpiece about Hester Prynne, hapless victim of sin, guilt and hypocrisy in Puritan New England.
When it first appeared in 1850, The Scarlet Letter enjoyed scandalous success. New England critics condemned its passionate subject matter. One critic complained that Nathaniel Hawthorne invested adultery with all the fascination of genius, and all the charms of a highly polished style. My preliminary chapter, wryly noted the author, has caused the greatest uproar that has happened here since witch-times.
As she emerges from the prison of a Puritan New England town, Hester Prynne defies the dark gloom much as the rose blooms against the prison door. With her illegitimate baby, Pearl, clutched in her arms and the letter Athe mark of an adulteressembroidered in scarlet thread on her breast, Hester holds her head high as she faces the malice and scorn of the townsfolk. Her powerful, bittersweet story is an American classic that continues to touch the hearts of modern readers with its timeless themes of guilt, passion and repentance.
Henry James
It is beautiful, admirable, extraordinary; it has in the highest degree that merit which I have spoken of as the mark of Hawthorne's best things--an indefinable purity and lightness of conception...One can often return to it; it supports familiarity and has the inexhaustible charm and mystery of great works of art.
Number of Reviews: 132
Average Rating:
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Write a Review
Boring for reader, but excellent for student
A reviewer, A reviewer, 10/01/2008
It will be one of the most pointless books you will read if you read it for fun. But, if you are a student you will get a lot of it: symbolism, puritan perspective, and a human story. I don't think your friends should read it but I do think your students should
Also recommended: The Crucible by Arthur Miller
The most pointless and wierdest book ever created
A reviewer, a writer in san diego, 08/15/2008
I seriously do not think Nathaniel Hawthorne was sober when he wrote this book. I mean seriously, the book had no point, and its meaningless descriptions of the background and 'The Black Man', and such, were truly painful. I had to read it for a school assignment, and fell asleep an average of 2.3 times every time i read it, for 3.4 hours. (Actually calculated the stats). Plus, i started crying once, because it was so boring and pointless.
Disappointing, and slightly strange
A reviewer, A reviewer, 07/27/2008
The Scarlet Letter is quite a disappointment, I am grieved to say. I usually love classic books, but the Scarlet Letter was a huge letdown for me. The characters are all creepy and strange, and Hawthorne seems to babble on about things leaving barely any room for dialogue between the characters.
Also recommended: Tess of the d'urbervilles, the picture of dorian gray
A Disappointment
A reviewer, a student and avid reader, 07/18/2008
I usually adore classic literature, but I thought the scarcity of dialogue and the narrators distance from the characters made a good story dull.
Also recommended: I enjoyed: Jane Eyre, The Picture of Dorian Gray, anything by Jane Austen, and Tess of the d'Urbervilles.
AMAZING TALE OF THE FAR-REACHING CONSEQUENCES OF SIN AND DECEIT
Ryan Robledo, a science fiction/fantasy writer, 05/29/2008
In The Scarlet Letter, Nathaniel Hawthorne tells a story of the results of sin. Set in Seventeenth Century Massachusetts, it is a tale of the life of Hester Prynne, who has been convicted of adultery. She is sentenced to wear a scarlet letter “A” on her chest, as a badge of dishonor. We follow her decisions to keep her lover secret, and how this bears down on her over time. We watch as her child 'Pearl' resultant of the act grows into a wild daughter, unrestrained by her mother, who feels guilt from her own sin, and who also questions the established morals of the society she lives in. All the while, her aged, learned husband comes closer and closer to discovering the identity of the man who took part in the adultery. Hawthorne describes all this with unique detail. Nearly every object -- whether it be a flower at a prison door, or a river in the woods -- contributes some symbolism to the plot. The language of the narrative is very fitting, and the dialogue is delightfully written in the correct form of the day. With small supporting details woven in 'such as the few brief but important appearances of a witch named Mistress Hibbins' and the deep symbolism, The Scarlet Letter has an almost supernatural tone, while it still remains a perfectly realistic novel. Many consider The Scarlet Letter to be Nathaniel Hawthorne’s crowning achievement. It has certainly stood the test of time, being a classic that is now over 150 years old. For anyone who enjoys this style of literature, this book is one to read. ___Ryan Robledo, Author of the Aelnathan
Also recommended: A Tale of Two Cities, Hard Times, The Raven (poem by Edgar Alan Poe) 'The Pit and the Pendulum'
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