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Archived Group Reads 2023
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Desperate Remedies: Background and Reading Schedule
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Thomas Hardy was a Victorian novelist and poet. Being a Victorian realist in the tradition of George Eliot, he was influenced both in his novels and poetry by Romanticism, including the poetry of William Wordsworth. He was highly critical of much in Victorian society, especially on the declining status of rural people in Britain, such as those from his native South West England.
Source: Wikipedia
You can find a comprehensive biography of the author in here: https://victorianweb.org/authors/hard...
Source: Wikipedia
You can find a comprehensive biography of the author in here: https://victorianweb.org/authors/hard...
Reading Schedule:
Week 1: Chapters 1-3 (Nov. 12 - 18)
Week 2: Chapters 4-6 (Nov. 19 - 25)
Week 3: Chapters 7-9 (Nov. 26 - Dec. 2)
Week 4: Chapters 10 -12 (Dec. 3 -9)
Week 5: Chapters 13 - 15 (Dec. 10 - 16)
Week 6: Chapters 16 - 18 (Dec. 17 - 23)
Week 7: Chapters 19 - 21, and the sequel (Dec. 24 - 30)
Week 1: Chapters 1-3 (Nov. 12 - 18)
Week 2: Chapters 4-6 (Nov. 19 - 25)
Week 3: Chapters 7-9 (Nov. 26 - Dec. 2)
Week 4: Chapters 10 -12 (Dec. 3 -9)
Week 5: Chapters 13 - 15 (Dec. 10 - 16)
Week 6: Chapters 16 - 18 (Dec. 17 - 23)
Week 7: Chapters 19 - 21, and the sequel (Dec. 24 - 30)
Great choice, Piyangie ! I read it 10 years ago, and can't wait to go through it again with the group :)
I´m always in for a Hardy, how unknown this even is to me. :)Any tips for a Kindle edition? (I don´t like to read from my laptop screen.)
Below is a link to Project Gutenberg. It should take you right to the page for downloads of Hardy’s Desperate Remedies. (If I didn’t mess it up.) I saw two options for Kindle; with one being for older Kindles.
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/3044
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/3044
I didn´t find out how to download those on my Kindle, but remembered I had a collection of Hardy novels there, so I´ll read this edition, hoping it´s good.
Glad to hear you're joining in, Michaela. Sorry to hear that the Kindle version didn't work for you. I use free Kindle editions from Amazon sometimes. But you need a kindle app for that.
I'm hoping to join this as I love Hardy (at least until his much later/more depressing period) and have not read or even heard of this one.
Although I've read Desperate Remedies it's been 12 years, just a bit longer than Brian. Since the last few Group Reads have been Dickens or books I've read I haven't joined one since Felix Holt and I miss it. So I'm joining in.
Piyangie wrote: "Looking forward to your insightful comments."So now I have to make my comments insightful? Oh, that's just great.
I've always felt your comments on books to be insightful. Hence the word. Sorry if it made you uneasy. :)
Piyangie wrote: "I've always felt your comments on books to be insightful. Hence the word. Sorry if it made you uneasy. :)"No apologies needed. I understand completely. People often have mistaken impressions of the quality of my posts when I'm in GR groups that Brian Fagan is in too ;)
Dear all! A very good day to you. I'm yet to open the next thread. Due to some personal circumstances, I won't be able to post the summary for the next two weeks' segments (4th and 5th). I apologize for my inability. Please bear with me. I promise to post the summaries as usual for weeks 6 and 7. Meanwhile, the threads will be opened for you to discuss the sections. Thank you for your understanding.
Books mentioned in this topic
Desperate Remedies (other topics)Desperate Remedies (other topics)










Desperate Remedies is Hardy's first published novel. After his disappointment in being unable to publish his first novel, Hardy was advised to write "a novel with a purely artistic purpose, giving it a more "complicated" plot.." And that was what he did, curiously choosing the mystery genre. Though first published anonymously, the novel's success brought Hardy into the Victorian limelight. The result was the long string of novels that we admire today.