Esther Waters
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Esther Waters
(Oxford world's classics)
Oxford University Press, 1999
- : pbk
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Note
Bibliography: p. [xxv]-xxvi
"Revised bibliography C. David Skilton 1995"--T.p. verso
Oxford paperbacks
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Esther Waters (1894) was one of the first English novels to defeat Victorian moral censorship. George Moore's story of a mother's fight for the life of her illegitimate son won Mr Gladstone's approval and was admitted, unaltered, into those bastions of Victorian conformity, the circulating libraries. Esther Waters is forced to leave home and become a servant in a well-to-do household. Seduced in a moment of weakness she has to leave her position and the novel charts her poignant story of poverty and hardship: first the lying-in hospital, then service as a wet-nurse, and even the workhouse as she struggles to look after her child. Adapting the French literary practices of sexual frankness and social exploration to the British climate, Moore produced his masterpiece in Esther Waters. A landmark in publishing history, it is also one of the finest of naturalistic novels.
by "Nielsen BookData"