I was supposed to read Tess for my Victorian Lit class, but ending up tossing it across the room in sheer frustration with that whiny bitch of a title character.
Oh word word word word word. Most annoying book ever.
River ,'War Stories'
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I was supposed to read Tess for my Victorian Lit class, but ending up tossing it across the room in sheer frustration with that whiny bitch of a title character.
Oh word word word word word. Most annoying book ever.
I love Tess of the D'urbervilles. And Jude the Obscure. But I am aware that there are very few like me. I did see the movie Tess at a formative age, so I sort of knew the story beforehand....
I think I would except I think Keira might be too straight-out babealicious to be EB. I think her attractiveness is supposed to sneak up on you after you get to know how great she is(except for the pretty eyes, right?) I'm no purist though, in fact, I'd love to see it as a Mod musical so they could put "Dizzy Miss Lizzy" in it. You purists can be glad I'm skint. I would probably go if I didn't pay full price.
My sister's a P&P book purist, and was disappointed in the BBC miniseries (she preferred the one from a few years before that, seen on PBS), mostly due to the added scene of Darcy diving into the pond (and the wet shirt that followed--oh, excuse me while I wipe up my drool...) and her opinion that Jennifer Ehle was too pretty to play Elizabeth Bennett.
I also thought Ehle was a babe, the woman who played the "pretty" sister wasn't as pretty (she has a horse nose!), and [heretic alert] not only did I not like Colin Firth in the pond, I don't like Colin Firth at all.
I did like the casting of Ehle, but I particularly liked the casting of Jane. It's enjoyable to think that ol' horse-face was the beauty of the neighborhood in P&P.
Ah, the early nineteenth century, when men loved dogs and horses...
I htink it's a cultural thing. Jane had a serene face and that peaches and cream thing the English love. I often see women of that cast portraying "beauties" in English dramas and I never get it.
Susannah Harker has such a placid, period face. She also played the incredibly virtuous Methodist Dinah Morris in the adaptation of "Adam Bede".
She's very good as one of the leads in the "Ultraviolet" though, playing a very modern, poised and rather steely physician.
Substitute Tess of the D'Ubervilles for Wuthering Heights, and this is me.
Ack! Ack! Two books I hate!
I was so disappointed when I finally read Wuthering Heights. This is the romantic hero? This is the famed Heathcliff? He's a puppy-killing psychopath!
And I will spare everyone my Hardy tirade.