Like Sons and Lovers?
Join aNobii to see if your friends read it, and discover similar books!
Book Description
With the publication in 1913 of his third novel, Sons and Lovers, D. H. Lawrence was established as an important and controversial writer. Autobiographical in origin, it is the story of the Morels, an English coal-mining family at the turn of the century, and focuses on the coming of age of one of tContinue
4 Reviews
-
Paola said on Feb 11, 2008 | Add your feedback
-
1 person find this helpful




This book undoubtly represents that D.H. Lawrence is one of the greatest writers in the twentieth century. The extremely intimate, almost lover-like relationship between Paul and his mother is on every page. This book also brings the reader to see how a mining family struggles to make its way up to ... (continue)
myself0826 said on Mar 3, 2012 | Add your feedback
-
1 person find this helpful




What a delightful story. Such wonderful scenes of life lived in a mining village, but the spotlight really focuses upon the home. It is a home set up by a couple who are very poor - after all he is only a miner - but they are so in love. She is so proud.
Then, as Lawrence knew only too well f ... (continue)
GraJon said on Oct 5, 2008 | Add your feedback
-
Bianca Rita Cataldi said on Sep 2, 2010 | Add your feedback
Book Details
-
Rating:




(182)
- English Books
- Paperback 517 Pages
- Publisher: Quality Paperback Book Club/Book-of-the-Month Club, Inc.
- Pub date: Jan 01, 1997
- Also available as: Mass Market Paperback, Hardcover, Audio Cassette, Library Binding, Others and eBook
- In other languages: other languages
Groups with this in collection
Prices Change currency & sellers
| ISBN | Edition | List | Sale | Seller |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No ISBN | Paperback | -- | -- | -- |
| Other editions → | ||||
| + 12 copies tradable: → | ||||
2 people find this helpful
when I read this first, I got really surprised when, more than two-thirds into the story, the author finally describes Paul's face: as "coarse" and rather plain. It was a shock because the psychological insight in this book is so deep and delicately done that one imagines Paul as some pale, frail po ... (continue)
when I read this first, I got really surprised when, more than two-thirds into the story, the author finally describes Paul's face: as "coarse" and rather plain. It was a shock because the psychological insight in this book is so deep and delicately done that one imagines Paul as some pale, frail poet - totally forgetting he's just a lower-class guy from the North. An extremely compelling story.
Is this helpful?