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Eve's Ransom

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The next morning passed in restless debate with himself. He did not cross the way to call upon the thought of speaking with her on the doorstep of a lodging-house proved intolerable. All day long he kept his post of observation. Other persons he saw leave and enter the house, but Miss Madeley did not come forth. That he could have missed her seemed impossible, for even while eating his meals he remained by the window. Perchance she had left home very early in the morning, but it was unlikely.

125 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1895

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About the author

George Gissing

393 books204 followers
People best know British writer George Robert Gissing for his novels, such as New Grub Street (1891), about poverty and hardship.

This English novelist who published twenty-three novels between 1880 and 1903. From his early naturalistic works, he developed into one of the most accomplished realists of the late-Victorian era.

Born to lower-middle-class parents, Gissing went to win a scholarship to Owens College, the present-day University of Manchester. A brilliant student, he excelled at university, winning many coveted prizes, including the Shakespeare prize in 1875. Between 1891 and 1897 (his so-called middle period) he produced his best works, which include New Grub Street, Born in Exile , The Odd Women , In the Year of Jubilee , and The Whirlpool . The middle years of the decade saw his reputation reach new heights: some critics count him alongside George Meredith and Thomas Hardy, the best novelists of his day. He also enjoyed new friendships with fellow writers such as Henry James, and H.G. Wells, and came into contact with many other up-and-coming writers such as Joseph Conrad and Stephen Crane.

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Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews
Profile Image for Chrissie.
2,811 reviews1,418 followers
December 24, 2020
A man gets a sum of money—what should he do with it? See what you think—did he spend it right?

George Gissing was a realist of the late-Victorian era. What is delivered here is real life. Not fantasy. No melodrama. Good straight believable people. The characters and the story make you feel happy. I like this a lot. A whole lot!

For a Victorian novel, wow, this is exceptionally good. They usually give me trouble, but not this!

The writing is explicit. Pay attention to the great choice of words. Gissing has a wide vocabulary, and his selection and usage of words is superb.

I call this a happy ending.

Jill Masters calmly and smoothly reads the audiobook. Very well told. Every word is clear. Told without fuss. No unnecessary drama. Four stars for the narration.

This is definitely my favorite by the author.

*******************

*Eve's Ransom 4 stars
*The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft 3 stars
*The Odd Women 3 stars
*New Grub Street 2 stars
Profile Image for robin friedman.
1,956 reviews422 followers
January 13, 2025
Eve's Ransom

George Gissing (1857 -- 1903) was a late Victorian novelist whose best-known works are "New Grub Street," a story of the difficulty of the literary life in an age of commercialism and "The Odd Women," a novel which examines British feminism in the late 19th Century. Gissing's remaining novels tend to go in and out of print. They attract a small, if devoted, readership. Gissing was a realistic, if highly self-centered, author who tried to portray poor and lower-middle class London life as he found it. He writes, as suggested above, of the difficulties of finding meaning in an age of commercialism and of the difficulties of and ambiguities in relations between the sexes. I have long loved Gissing's books, and wanted to revisit him again.

I was pleased to see that Gissing's short novel "Eve's Ransom" (1894) is again in print. (I knew the book through an old Dover press edition.) Most of Gissing's other novels are lengthy, in the three-book model of the Victorians. Eve's Ransom is short, and the somewhat modernistic form of the book suits Gissing well. It remains one of my favorite of Gissing's works and is a good short introduction for those coming to him for the first time. Because of its unfamiliarity, I will offer a somewhat extended summary of the story in the hopes that it will interest some readers in the book or the author.

Put simply, Eve's Ransom is a story of a young man who loves a woman who doesn't love him back. The primary character is a young man named Maurice Hilliard, possessed of a terrible temper which comes to harm him in the course of the story. Hilliard is unhappily employed as a mechanical draftsman in Dudley, England. He has a contentious encounter with a man named Dengate which results in Dengate repaying Hilliard a debt of over 400 pounds that Dengate had long earlier borrowed from Hilliard's father. With some reason, Dengate predicts that Hilliard will soon dissipate the money and go to the devil.

Hilliard bids farewell to his close friend, Robert Narraamore, quits his job, and forms the ambition to experience what life is about if only for a short time before the money runs out. Before he leaves Dudley, Hilliard's landlady shows him a photograph of a young woman named Eve Madeley who has moved to London. Hilliard becomes enamored of her. With leads from the landlady and others, he is able to find and become acquainted with Eve in London.

The book tells of Hilliard's relationship with Eve and with her friend, the somewhat naive Patty Ringrose. Eve, through intelligence and effort, has worked her way from the poverty of her birth to a solid position as a bookkeeper. She still fears poverty and is determined to avoid falling back to it. Unwittingly, Eve was involved with a married man, but she terminates the relationship when she discovers the marriage.

Ultimately, Eve asks Hilliard for a loan to assist her troubled former lover. Hilliard agrees on condition that Eve and Patty accompany him to Paris, at his expense, so that Eve can free herself from her relationship. Eve reluctantly agrees. She feels grateful to Hilliard for the help but also comes to resent the hold the money and her feeling of gratitude to Hilliard have on her. She does not have the same romantic feelings for Hilliard that Hilliard has for her.

In Paris, Hailliard spends time with his old friend Narramore who is vacationing with a friend named Birching. Narramore has inherited money and is making a success of himself selling beds. Birching is an architect. At Narramore's contrivance, Hailliard uses most of his remaining money to apprentice himself to Birching's firm -- seeking to put his drafting talents and his interest in architecture to good use. He relocates to Birmingham and lives again in poverty as he pursues his architectural apprenticeship. Eve seeks out work, with the expectation that she will marry Haillard when he becomes able to support himself through architecture. A triangle develops with Haillard, Eve and Narramore which is resolved in the latter part of the book.

Gissing's story involves, as is frequently the case in his books, two flawed and not entirely likeable primary characters, Halliard and Eve. The value of the story lies in Gissing's understanding of his characters and in his unerring descriptions of dreary places and people such as rooming houses, small apartments, dingy shops, railway waiting stations, landladies, in London, Dudley, Birmingham and elsewhere. In contrast to other Victorian writers, Gissing had a harsh, misanthropic view of people. Gissing's pessimism is on display in this tale of failed love but with something of a light touch As the story ends, there is a suggestion that Hailliard has found, in a roundabout way, the freedom from care and the ability to live that he hoped to experience when he received the 400 pounds. If chastened, Hilliard has not gone to the devil in the manner that Dengate had predicted. As Gissing eloquently, if ironically, ends his tale: "And Maurice Hilliard, a free man in his own conceit, sang to himself a song of the joy of life."

Gissing is a writer on the border between Victorianism and modernity. Although he is not for everyone, I hope this review may inspire some readers to explore his works for themselves.

Robin Friedman
Profile Image for Diane.
176 reviews22 followers
January 30, 2026
In 1893 Gissing had hoped to write an industrial novel to be
called "The Iron Gods" and started out on a holiday to Weymouth
and Cotswolds to find inspiration but as usual domestic
disturbances with Edith threw his life into chaos and the novel
was never finished. Parts of it were recycled into "Eve's
Ransom", a book that Gissing felt ashamed to have written but
with the ever increasing costs of a growing family he could not
resist the temptation of the easy money short novels and stories
offered. Gissing was a hopeless businessman but negotiated a
pretty good deal for himself. He was to get 150 pounds for the
"Illustrated London News" to run it in serial form and he would
then be free to sell the novel again in book form for whatever he
could get. And he needed as much money as he could earn what with
a sickly son, rent being due and holidays at Beachy Head, Hastings
and Eastbourne. "Eve's Ransom" wasn't the trash that Gissing
believed nor was it the "best and least appreciated" of his works
that H. G. Wells vowed.
Gissing had six months to write the story, for 5 months he could
write nothing, then in a burst of activity wrote the whole thing
in 25 days. The theme is freedom - freedom that comes from having
money (a theme Gissing could write about with conviction).
You are drawn in instantly with the chance meeting between Hilliard,
an educated young man trapped in a dead end job in grimy
Birmingham and Dengate, an unscrupulous businessman who owed
Hilliard's father a great sum of money and the end of the train
journey shows Hilliard richer by over 400 pounds. (Dengate inexplicably
shows up at the end of the book for a small confrontation scene
before passing into the night!!). Maurice decides to use the
money to live but not before promising to drop in on Eve Madeley,
a friend of his land lady's daughter, who has disappeared to London
and has been in sparse contact for the past couple of years. Her
background (and familiarity with Gissing's other books) prepares
the reader for a girl who is determined to find financial success
but to Maurice she is the girl of his dreams and he spins a fairy
tale around the picture he has so long admired in the album.
Familiar Gissing characters abound - suspicious landladies (Gissing
had plenty of experience of those). He also didn't have much
sympathy for weak minded and tearful women - Maurice's sister-in
-law Emily is portrayed as not really being good enough for his
late brother and when she hesitatingly introduces her soon to be
next husband, Gissing describes him in glowing terms with the
summing up being she is lucky to catch a man like that and "hopefully
Mr. Marr would not repent too soon of his choice"!!
He finally finds Eve but her comings and goings are not those of the
diligent working girl his former land lady has led him to believe
that Eve is. In fact when he finally introduces himself at a Health
exhibition she has just had an assignation with a strange man (much
like Monica's meeting of Widowson in "The Odd Women") and is not
really that standoffish with Maurice - especially when she learns
that he had just come back from Paris "for his pleasure". This is a
terrific mystery as Maurice also wonders how Eve is able to lead a
life of amusement as well.
As with a lot of Gissing's stories sometimes it is the minor
characters who stick in your memory. Patty Ringrose is a delight,
she is Eve's good friend and her joy of living is irrepressible -
she alone makes the Paris trip worthwhile even though she is treated
more like Eve's maid than an equal companion.
Hilliard soon finds himself back in Birmingham, almost at the end
of his funds but he has just enough left to pay for a place as a
trainee architect (a boyhood dream) and it is in this section that
Gissing shows his true feelings as regards the old idyllic rural
countryside verses the encroaching industrialization as Ashton Hall
looks out upon "the joyless streets and fuming chimneys", it's walls
being blackened with the ever belching smoke.
There are also some thinly veiled domestic views of Gissing's that
come up in a conversation with Eve when Emily begs for help from a
husband who sounds as though he has turned brutal. Maurice laughs it
off, implies that she has only got what she deserves and needed to
be taught a lesson - the scary thing is that Eve sympathizes with
him!!!
I will not give the plot away but the book finishes with Maurice a
sadder but wiser man fully vindicated in his views about women.
Profile Image for Sandy .
394 reviews2 followers
July 30, 2024
By the same author
The Paying Guest (26/11/15) 3 stars
Thyrza (28/04/16) 3 stars
A Life's Morning (30/04/16) 3 stars
The Odd Women (20/08/20) 4 stars
Sleeping Fires (19/11/20) 4 stars
Our Friend the Charlatan (19/01/21) 4 stars
The Crown of Life (02/03/21) 4 stars
Eve's Ransom (02/95/21) 4 stars
Human Odds and Ends: Stories and Sketches (30/06/21) 3 stars
The House of Cobwebs and Other Stories (07/09/21) 4 stars
The Emancipated, Volume 1 (28/02/22) 3 stars
The Emancipated, Volume 2 (14/03/22) 4 stars
The Emancipated, Volume 3 (04/04/22) 5 stars
Sins of the father,: And other tales, (16/11/23) 4 stars
Profile Image for Robert burke.
157 reviews3 followers
October 1, 2020
“The old contradiction is still in force, my fame brings me no money, my books have only the smallest sale.” George Gissing

Hilliard received 435£ unexpectedly and uses it to escape his dismal life until the money runs out. He finds a photograph of a woman found in an album and sets out to find her.

“As in most of Gissing books, the setting is autobiographically exact and the theme is freedom.”
Profile Image for Sally.
893 reviews12 followers
September 7, 2019
I enjoyed The Odd Women, but found this kind of tedious going. Hilliard, a young man who finds his life dull and mechanical and not very well-paying, is given money by a man who owed his father. He decides to leave his job and take a holiday where he can finally enjoy life. His enjoyment is kind of dull since he’s used to saving every penny. As he leaves the house where he has boarded (an industrial town near Birmingham) for London, he grows enamored of the picture of a friend of the daughter of the house and decides to find her. She, too, is burdened by a hard life and low pay, and although she doesn’t admit it at first, is a,so undergoing a crisis of spirit. Although she keeps pulling away he doesn’t take the hint and splurges to take Eve and her closest friend to Paris for several months so that they can all enjoy life. He keeps wanting her to love him and she feels gratitude but nothing more. Eventually she marries his best friend. He’s hard to take and so is she. But after she’s been married for a year and he finally becomes the architect that he’s a,ways wanted to be, he’s happy if not married.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Pgchuis.
2,415 reviews42 followers
May 2, 2025
3.5* rounded down.

Hilliard unexpectedly comes into a sum of money which will allow him to give up work for a couple of years. Attracted by the photograph of Eve, a woman in his landlady's album, he tracks her down in London and gradually places her under such a sense of obligation to him that she agrees to marry him, but will she follow through...?

This was interesting, although Hilliard wasn't very likeable, and both he and the narrator had plenty of disparaging things to say about women and the working class. It kept me guessing and I thought the ending was very satisfactory.
542 reviews
May 22, 2017
Gissing was a well known, if short lived, British writer of the late 19th century. His writing is thought to be a realistic view of Victorian Britain. Hilliard, the main character, unexpectedly is given 436 pounds. He quits his dead end job and decides to live on it for as long as the money will allow. But, instead he uses it to change the lives of two young women, also caught in dead end jobs. In some ways a romance, but not quite.
Profile Image for Onyango Makagutu.
276 reviews30 followers
March 17, 2018
Interesting book about life. How money plays significant role in people's relationship
Profile Image for Ferris.
1,505 reviews23 followers
October 22, 2009
George Gissing's novel, "Eve's Ransom" is a character study of a man and a woman and their frailties. It is a good story, if a tad predictable. It is only predictable, however, because Gissing does such a good job of telling the story, and the characters are timeless, unfortunately. There is a touch of nobility along with selfishness, and also a bit of the fatigue of struggling financially through life and the toll that it takes.
Profile Image for MeiLin Miranda.
Author 28 books93 followers
October 9, 2010
An odd, old-fashioned book, the kind I like, "Eve's Ransom" is the story of a man who determines almost on a whim to rescue a young woman from a life of drudgery. As I read, I kept thinking of Rebecca West's The Judge, though that novel is far superior. Something about Gissing's Eve and Hilliard reminds me of West's Ellen and Richard. I shall have to tease out exactly what later...
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews

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