I love how these 'How to read' videos keep getting longer and longer. The fact that you give us these for free is such a privilege, seriosly. Thank you!
I’ve appreciated the growth that’s come from the wide variety of books we’ve read this year and I’m so glad that we’re finishing out the rest of the year in my beloved Victorian vintage. It feels like coming home. The description of Thomas Hardy being a combination of Shelley and Eliot is high praise! Thank you for all of your hard work this year, Benjamin! It’s been a wonderful year in the HLBC. -Jess
Thank you so much, Jess! I'm so happy you've had such a powerful year on this reading journey! I must say, I've felt an enormous amount of growth too, thanks to you and all of our fellow lovers of literature at the club. It's been an amazing ride. And I love your description of reading Hardy as feeling like returning home. I really feel that!! ☺
I studied English literature in Damascus, Syria 🥰I fell in love with D.H Lawrence, The Brontës, Virginia Woolf and of course Thomas Hardy and his Wessex world ❤Thank for this video🌹One of my favourite novels.
I thank God I found you every time I watch your videos. Thank you very much for the work you put in all your videos. I wish I had a teacher like you. Could you do a video on children's books? And one for Children. I would like my Grandson who is 10 years old to spend some time with you. You are so Inspiring. I recommend your channel to people all the time. You are my Shakespeare, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Melville...
Aw, thank you so much! That is so incredibly kind of you to say. I really appreciate you sharing your love of books with me here and recommending the channel! Absolutely, I am definitely planning to do some videos on children's books. I've been wanting to discuss children's literature for the longest time. I'm very much looking forward to becoming a parent myself so I can relive all the wonderful books from tradition ☺️🙏
Finding your channel has significantly changed the course of my life. Ive always liked reading but im unsure if I would have ever gotten this deep at my age without your help. Thank you so much, ive changed so much for the better because of these great books.
This was a first read for me I completed this book very quickly, two months ago, in anticipation of these lectures. It was also my first Hardy read and to be honest my first exposure to him, having not really heard of him, somehow. I luved this book! The story, the imagery, the characters, and of course the writing. A whole new literary world has been opened for me. Once again thank you Benjamin!!
Love to see the new setup, Ben! Very beautiful I have to say, as well as the lighting. And it’s almost a new year, can’t wait to see what you have in store for the next year. I’m thinking of joining the patreon on January.
Hello Ben, This is my first read through of Hardy. I purchased a copy of the book and read through the first two chapters. Thank you for putting together this video and the insightful guidance into this work!
What a coincidence.. I finished the book yesterday evening and a few minutes later I went on UA-cam and there it was.. a brand new video talking about this fabulous book! Greetings from Germany! :)
Red this book many times. Also the wood landers return of the native the and most of the others .I have loved them for many years and will always go back to them I am so sure.
Your book advice and guides have helped me become addicted to classic literature, and I don't think it will end anytime soon, nor would I want it to end. I mean, I have been reading them for a while, but thanks to you, I began to read deeper into it, and a new world opened up. I must thank you so much, that not even a thank you will be enough to show my heartfelt appreciation for you for giving me a shining view of classics like never before. P. S. I shall be reading Ulysses soon, but I am currently reading The Canterbury Tales because I like a little challenge 😉
I love this book. Read it for the first time last month, and I have now moved on to some of Hardy's other works: The Mayor of Casterbridge and Return of the Native. He is a new favorite right now.
''If you do not cry while reading some of Hardy's novels, then you may well be dead inside'' Indeed. my mother gave me all of Hardy's novels when I was around 12. I think they formed me.
Ben, I am thrilled to see this video about Hardy! I plan on reading all of his novels eventually. Thank you so much for this and for your eloquence in speaking of him.
Thank you so much, Marian! I really appreciate that. It makes me so happy you're planning to read all of Hardy's novels! The effect of reading them all and living in his world really is so rewarding ☺
Great talk. I studied Hardy in uni and haven't done a reread but after listening to this lecture I feel like picking one up. The Woodlanders was my favourite. Tess was too sad. I want to have another look at the poetry mentioned. A project for the week!
Thanks for this inspiration. I thought about reading Hardy's novels chronologically. I may have read Tess in high school, but don't remember. Good to know about the connection with FFTMC and Elegy in the Country Churchyard, as I took a class eons ago in England in which we read this poem and visited the churchyard. I am looking forward to the study of Hardy's literature! Thank you for sharing you wisdom and perspective!
One of my favorite authors Love how you a deeper perspective and elucidate, connect it with different authors, just amazed Always liked your talks on classical authors after hearing you talk about this book although i have read it earlier i think i should read it again in view of different light. Thank you just love all your talks India
Thank you for a comprehensive view of Thomas Hardy novel. I had a binge of reading Thomas Hardy novels back in the day and now I feel the need to revisit this one again thanks to you. Much appreciated!
Thank you so much for watching, Susan! I love a good Thomas Hardy binge myself. I think he definitely has to be one of the most bingeable novelists of all time!! ☺️
What an absolutely stunning concurrence! I just picked up Far From The Madding Crowd because the weather is getting colder and the sun is setting sooner🍂 So far it seems great. But now, because of your video, I have an extra motivation!!
That's a beautiful coincidence! I love the fact that the autumnal weather made you pick Hardy up! I return to his novels every year around this time because the shorter days and the changing colours of the leaves put me in the Hardy mood!! 🍁☺️
Once again brilliant content, sir! Always makes the day better to see you’ve just posted a new video when coming home from school. Complete tour of the bookshelves coming soon? Would love to get a deeper dive into your collection of both Everyman’s, Oxford’s and Penguin’s, as well as a closer look on your rarer collector’s items and your complete collections of Dickens, Shakespeare, Tolstoy and Dostoyevsky (and more). Love and respect from Norway
I am currently reading through Hardy’s Return of the Native - and I am absolutely in awe of his craft. I never read Hardy earlier because of his tendency towards the tragic but I can see several of the influences you mentioned earlier in Hardy’s Novel. Eustacia Vye is a Shakespearean heroine- she is , (as Harold Bloom states with regard to Shakespearean protagonists) constantly hearing herself speak and think - as evinced in her conversation with Damon Wildeve at the end of Book 1 where she realises that she isn’t in love with him anymore because he has been rejected by another woman. She is also a mythic hero - in female form. The chapter “The Queen of the Night “ references the antagonist in Mozart’s opera - The Magic Flute but also paints Eustacia as a mythic hero. Compared to a Greek Goddess with all the fickle and tempestuous nature that entails and painted with tragic strokes - she has a fatal flaw and her failure to reckon with it is to be her downfall. Hardy is also deeply interested in superficial appearances hiding character with depth. We see the Reddlingman Diggory Venn commonly referred to as a Mephistophelean figure - he is red from head to toe, seen burning a fire at the bottom of a pit and appears out of the shadows on the Heath - a source of terror to those who see him. However he is a handsome man, a sensitive man and a clever man who isn’t cunning. His conversation with Eustacia in which she refuses him thrice has echoes with Christ refusing Satan in the wilderness. The wilderness here is Egdon Heath and the Christlike figure is the mostly uncharitable Eustacia while the devil like Diggory Venn is actually engaged in an act of utmost selflessness. I find these inversions subtle, wonderful and deep to consider. There are beautiful strains of Dante - with constant references to the devil, the pit and the abyss and the villagers burning a bonfire on Rainbarrow on Guy Fawkes day is reminiscent of the Witches in Macbeth - though there are several inversions at play here again. I am yet to finish Book 2 but I am loving it and hope I can read more Hardy in the future .
Great video! Far From The Maddening Crowd was my second Hardy, I was pretty young. It never occurred to me that there is a 'how to' read it. I just read it, loved it, then re-read it often I still have my original battered copy.
Thank you so much! Those old battered copies are the most special books in our collection, aren't they? They contain a little piece of us from when we first read these great novels ☺️
I am looking forward to reading Hardy with you! I finished Tess earlier this year and I was heartbroken. Hardy has a special place in my heart. His "A Pair of Blue Eyes" was simply sublime. Thank you for a wonderful video, Ben!
Read it years ago, I enjoy the refreshers from you. Read The Shadow Line by Joseph Conrad in October based on Louise Erdrich list of perfect short novels in The Sentence, another October read.
Alas, my first Thomas Hardy was Tess of the d'Urbervilles. It made me so angry even tho I knew the background of the period, but still. I will go to the store and buy this book so I can have some sweetness to connect to the author. I can imagine you live in the same countryside as the book portray. Thank you for all your videos and podcast, you are a big influence to my bookshelf.
FFMC was the most recent Hardy novell I've read, finishing off "The Big Five" of his fiction. Since it has a relatively happy ending, especially in view of what came next, I was a little put off. Mayor of Casterbridge was my first Hardy when I was still a teenager and the one I remember most vividly!
Oh Benjamin. Once again, you have put out the perfect video at the perfect time. I am almost halfway through Far from the Madding Crowd, my first ever read of it and Hardy- and I was really enjoying it however, all of a sudden I’ve been feeling like I hit a wall and have been losing interest. I’ve been contemplating DNF’ing it, but I have no doubt that after I watch your entire video, I will probably change my mind. I’m sure you’ll bring some new insights and tips that will help me get back into it. 😊 I’ll let you know! 😉
Hang in there, J. Just surrender to the smell of the hay, the glow of the embers, the unique characters. Most of the plot is in the final third. Its coming and its worth the wait. You'll be glad you are so grounded in Wessex when you get to it. Enjoy!
Hi Ben, I really like Far From The Madding Crowd. My first Hardy novel I read was also Tess. I was 19 and in college, a librarian told me that I couldn't read Tess. I read Tess of the U'drbervilles and enjoyed it. I think Gabriel Oak is one of the nicest and kindest men in english literature. He's there through everything even though Bathsheba sacks him and is so stubborn and selfish. Do you think Bathsheba deserves Gabriel? I always wonder if Bathsheba made Gabriel unhappy in marriage? I love Hardy's descriptions of the seasons and nature. Bathsheba is dazzled by Troy and messes with Boldwood's psychology. I own the Gabriel Oak and Bathsheba rose. I would love to talk to you about these novels and I feel that you wouldn't judge me about my books and dismiss books I love. Thank you for your video. 😊📖
Sasha is so adorable!!! Will you train the puppy yourself? I've had a copy of FFTMC for a year because I've seen the movies and love the story. But I've been waiting for your how-to video. Thank you so much for this, Benjamin. I can't wait to get into Hardy's world. 💙
Thank you so much! Absolutely! I've been training her and I'm blown away at how intelligent she is. She learns things super quick and gets a lot of fun out of the training. And happy reading with Hardy's great novel! I'd love to know what you make of it and how you think it compares to the movies ☺️
Wow, this is such a wonderful lecture. Thank you so much for posting. I have never read Hardy, but I have this novel sitting on my bookshelf. Hmmm, should I take it up? I think I should. How could I not after listening to this love letter to Hardy.
Aw, thank you so much. I really appreciate that! I'm so happy you're taking Hardy up now. You won't regret it! I'd love to know what you make of the story ☺️
I was in the shower this morning and just thought to myself, "Far from the Madding Crowd. Where have I heard of that before?". I just saw this video notification. Hah.
I think I need to start again with Thomas Hardy! Some years ago I read "The well beloved" and I did not like it at all, somehow it didn' t seem real to me. I think I have :The Return of the Native" on my bookshelves. I admire goyw deep knowledge on kiterature and always enjoy your videos.
Can this be... telepathy?? I have just put Far from the madding crowd "on my desk for a reading! Wonderful to get your video this morning! I love all Hardy's novels! Ps: if anyone is interested in Hardy's biography, I recommend The chosen, by Elisabeth Lowry, a novel about his somehow"sad"... relationship with his wife Emma . Thanks again!
Thank you, Ben for this book review. Thomas Hardy is a very interesting person :) also, I notice that your videos are getting longer lol, in a good way!
Just got this for my birthday, looking forward to picking it up (btw i also have tess, so which would be a better Hardy to start with in your opinion?)
Happy birthday!! That's a tremendous present right there :) Tess was actually the one I started with, but I would personally say that Far from the Madding Crowd would be the perfect first one to get into Hardy. Tess is a masterpiece, but it's very dark and I find it weighs very heavily upon me!
@@BenjaminMcEvoy oh maybe next time i'll watch the video before commenting as i see you directly answer this question within the first 3 minutes lmao. thanks for your lovely reply nonetheless!
25:38 I finished Othello 5 days ago and I couldn't relate more. Usually dark works make me want to read other works because now I know that the next work will be light in comparison, not the case with this one.
I had a period when I read Hardy's books one after the other, but I don't recommend it. Alternate your reading with something lighter. I for one appreciate the fact that I get this level of lecture for free.
Hi Ben! it's been a while since I tuned in...Are you currently reading this book in the club? Also, will you post what the list will be for next year (2025)? I commented too early. Couldn't help myself. Congrats on Sasha. She is adorable.
I wonder if I would like reading "Far From the Madding Crowd" in middle-age? I was assigned it for a 10th grade English course (I was 16) and hated it. It was a painful exercise to read it and I quickly forgot it afterwards.
I believe Sasha will become the most literary dog among all others on the island. You will enjoy the time reading to her, and seeing which author she expressly devours, and which ones she drops her head to, putting her gaze on some secret dream, and soon vanishes into her own world of make believe.
Chapman & Chapman Fabri Facsimile of the complete works of Charles Dickens. They came out with a monthly magazine called The Dickens Collection many years ago, but you can get them secondhand online! :)
"Lads, let's reschedule today's plans. Benjamin's dropped another one." Believe it or not, I swung by my regular bookstore today and saw this one from Hardy, realized after a moment I didn't have it (though I had purchased 2-3 of his other works earlier this year), and ended up buying it. Appreciate your works as always, and hoping you have been well, my friend.
Thank you very much, Shrinesh! I appreciate that deeply, my friend! I am so happy to hear you got yourself a copy of this phenomenal work! I would love to know what you make of it ☺️
Hi, Ben. All good ? What an incredible video! His passion for words overflows every line in this video. Your way of embracing and experiencing the love of reading inspires me every day when choosing my readings and re-readings. Your kindness, lightness and passion are contagious and extremely inspiring. thank you for all of this I really want to read Thomas Hardy :) kisses from São Paulo in Brazil ❤ * *I'm rereading Jane Eyer and following along with her incredible video 😊
I love Thomas Hardy....one of my favorites authors....but I must say, in FFTMC, Boldwood just struck me as a silly comic figure. My sense of humor is sometimes weird and he was not intended to be humorous, but there was something so ridiculous in him that I could not help it. Anyway, I preferred some of his other novels as I think he got better and better as time wore on. FFTMC is very good however.
@@BenjaminMcEvoy 😊 For suuure, I sense she has a very warm heart. She's sooooo fluffy! P.S. Thaaank you so much for what you're doing. I discovered your videos about a week ago. I have been devouring them. You ARE helping people! You have a very interesting way of thinking and it is very inspiring. So much that I started to read Emily Dickinson - the same BIG violet edition I saw in one of your videos, bought it in Dublin - basically every day now (as I do have some books in English), the 1800s language is difficult to understand, but maybe something will open up in me. 🙌 You're a really wonderful person! We'll stay friends! Hope to be able to join the book club soooooon.
Benjamin, I love all these books you have introduced to me, and others, but my wallets nearly empty 😂. PS: have you ever heard of Roberto Bolaños 2666.
I love how these 'How to read' videos keep getting longer and longer. The fact that you give us these for free is such a privilege, seriosly. Thank you!
Thank you so much! I really deeply appreciate that and am so happy you're enjoying them ☺️🙏
Fourteen thousand people bathing in the beauty of Thomas Hardy here in 2024, thanks to you Ben. Just incredible.
I’ve appreciated the growth that’s come from the wide variety of books we’ve read this year and I’m so glad that we’re finishing out the rest of the year in my beloved Victorian vintage. It feels like coming home. The description of Thomas Hardy being a combination of Shelley and Eliot is high praise! Thank you for all of your hard work this year, Benjamin! It’s been a wonderful year in the HLBC. -Jess
Thank you so much, Jess! I'm so happy you've had such a powerful year on this reading journey! I must say, I've felt an enormous amount of growth too, thanks to you and all of our fellow lovers of literature at the club. It's been an amazing ride. And I love your description of reading Hardy as feeling like returning home. I really feel that!! ☺
I studied English literature in Damascus, Syria 🥰I fell in love with D.H Lawrence, The Brontës, Virginia Woolf and of course Thomas Hardy and his Wessex world ❤Thank for this video🌹One of my favourite novels.
I thank God I found you every time I watch your videos. Thank you very much for the work you put in all your videos.
I wish I had a teacher like you.
Could you do a video on children's books? And one for Children. I would like my Grandson who is 10 years old to spend some time with you. You are so Inspiring. I recommend your channel to people all the time. You are my Shakespeare, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Melville...
Aw, thank you so much! That is so incredibly kind of you to say. I really appreciate you sharing your love of books with me here and recommending the channel! Absolutely, I am definitely planning to do some videos on children's books. I've been wanting to discuss children's literature for the longest time. I'm very much looking forward to becoming a parent myself so I can relive all the wonderful books from tradition ☺️🙏
Finding your channel has significantly changed the course of my life. Ive always liked reading but im unsure if I would have ever gotten this deep at my age without your help. Thank you so much, ive changed so much for the better because of these great books.
This was a first read for me
I completed this book very quickly, two months ago, in anticipation of these lectures. It was also my first Hardy read and to be honest my first exposure to him, having not really heard of him, somehow.
I luved this book! The story, the imagery, the characters, and of course the writing.
A whole new literary world has been opened for me.
Once again thank you Benjamin!!
Thomas Hardy remains my 2nd favourite author precisely for the reasons you describe in the first couple of minutes of this video.
A lovely new background set up, I’m liking it ❤
Thank you so much!! ☺🙏
Love to see the new setup, Ben! Very beautiful I have to say, as well as the lighting. And it’s almost a new year, can’t wait to see what you have in store for the next year. I’m thinking of joining the patreon on January.
I hope you do! It has enriched my life so much!
It is amazing! I definitely recommend!
Hello Ben,
This is my first read through of Hardy. I purchased a copy of the book and read through the first two chapters. Thank you for putting together this video and the insightful guidance into this work!
Thank you so much, Kari! I'm so excited to hear this is your first reading of Hardy! I'd love to know what you make of him! ☺️
Read this in 2022 and the Wessex Tales. I could not stop thinking about this book. Good sign of well done!
Just bought a copy of this book today at your recommendation. Instantly amazed by this guy!
I'm so happy to hear you're loving him already, Jeremy!! :)
What a coincidence.. I finished the book yesterday evening and a few minutes later I went on UA-cam and there it was.. a brand new video talking about this fabulous book! Greetings from Germany! :)
Wow!! That's amazing! I think Hardy would call that Fate ;) Happy reading over in beautiful Deutschland! 🇩🇪☺️
Great video! Authoritative, exploratory, authentic commentary, and I appreciate the use of artwork. Nothing on UA-cam quite like this.
Wow, thank you so much, Nic! I really appreciate that. You have completely made my day!! ☺️
Red this book many times. Also the wood landers return of the native the and most of the others .I have loved them for many years and will always go back to them I am so sure.
Only one I've read is Tess. You've certainly inspired me to grab his other works from my shelf. So many authors to study in such little time lol
Your book advice and guides have helped me become addicted to classic literature, and I don't think it will end anytime soon, nor would I want it to end. I mean, I have been reading them for a while, but thanks to you, I began to read deeper into it, and a new world opened up. I must thank you so much, that not even a thank you will be enough to show my heartfelt appreciation for you for giving me a shining view of classics like never before.
P. S. I shall be reading Ulysses soon, but I am currently reading The Canterbury Tales because I like a little challenge 😉
I love this book. Read it for the first time last month, and I have now moved on to some of Hardy's other works: The Mayor of Casterbridge and Return of the Native. He is a new favorite right now.
''If you do not cry while reading some of Hardy's novels, then you may well be dead inside'' Indeed. my mother gave me all of Hardy's novels when I was around 12. I think they formed me.
Thomas Hardy is one of my all time favorite authors.
Is this book a good place to start? The only Hardy novel I know anything about is Jude the Obscure.
Ben, I am thrilled to see this video about Hardy! I plan on reading all of his novels eventually. Thank you so much for this and for your eloquence in speaking of him.
Thank you so much, Marian! I really appreciate that. It makes me so happy you're planning to read all of Hardy's novels! The effect of reading them all and living in his world really is so rewarding ☺
Wow, I feel like this is a graduate level lecture, and I should be taking notes. Hopefully there won’t be a test! So much information.
Great talk. I studied Hardy in uni and haven't done a reread but after listening to this lecture I feel like picking one up. The Woodlanders was my favourite. Tess was too sad. I want to have another look at the poetry mentioned. A project for the week!
Thank you so much for this. Just love Thomas Hardy and have read Far from the Madding Crowd twice but know that I will read it yet again ❤
You're so welcome! Thank you so much for watching! It makes me so happy to know you love Hardy so much ☺️
Thanks for this inspiration. I thought about reading Hardy's novels chronologically. I may have read Tess in high school, but don't remember. Good to know about the connection with FFTMC and Elegy in the Country Churchyard, as I took a class eons ago in England in which we read this poem and visited the churchyard. I am looking forward to the study of Hardy's literature! Thank you for sharing you wisdom and perspective!
I just started the book this weekend. Loving his writing style so far! I’m underlining more than usual. 🥰
I'm so thrilled you're loving Hardy's writing style, Karen! I love how incredibly poetic his prose is ☺
@@BenjaminMcEvoyit’s so lyrical ❤. What an excellent time to have joined the HLBC.
One of my favorite authors
Love how you a deeper perspective and elucidate, connect it with different authors, just amazed
Always liked your talks on classical authors after hearing you talk about this book although i have read it earlier i think i should read it again in view of different light.
Thank you just love all your talks
India
I love Thomas Hardy’s books. You have inspired me to reread them
That makes me so happy to hear, Carol!! ☺️
I'd love Thomas Hardy novels Thanks for exploring this one and such depth
You're so welcome! Thank you so much for watching :)
Thank you for a comprehensive view of Thomas Hardy novel. I had a binge of reading Thomas Hardy novels back in the day and now I feel the need to revisit this one again thanks to you. Much appreciated!
Thank you so much for watching, Susan! I love a good Thomas Hardy binge myself. I think he definitely has to be one of the most bingeable novelists of all time!! ☺️
What an absolutely stunning concurrence! I just picked up Far From The Madding Crowd because the weather is getting colder and the sun is setting sooner🍂 So far it seems great. But now, because of your video, I have an extra motivation!!
That's a beautiful coincidence! I love the fact that the autumnal weather made you pick Hardy up! I return to his novels every year around this time because the shorter days and the changing colours of the leaves put me in the Hardy mood!! 🍁☺️
Once again brilliant content, sir! Always makes the day better to see you’ve just posted a new video when coming home from school. Complete tour of the bookshelves coming soon? Would love to get a deeper dive into your collection of both Everyman’s, Oxford’s and Penguin’s, as well as a closer look on your rarer collector’s items and your complete collections of Dickens, Shakespeare, Tolstoy and Dostoyevsky (and more). Love and respect from Norway
Hi, Ben. This will be my first Thomas Hardy and, as usual, your pre-lecture has whetted my reading appetite for another delicious book!
He's SOOO incredible. You are in for a treat!
Thank you very much, Kathleen!! I'm so excited to hear that this is your first Hardy. I would love to know what you make of the work! ☺️
Ohhh Thomas Hardy...5 years ago I read Tess of the d'Urbervilles. It was a good book. Next time I"ll try this one. Thank you!
I'm so excited to hear that, Natalia! I would love to know what you think of it ☺️
Apart from your brilliant commentary I also love the artwork that you present in the video.
Thank you so much, Micha! I'm so happy you enjoy it. I love choosing the artwork for these videos 😀
I am currently reading through Hardy’s Return of the Native - and I am absolutely in awe of his craft.
I never read Hardy earlier because of his tendency towards the tragic but I can see several of the influences you mentioned earlier in Hardy’s Novel.
Eustacia Vye is a Shakespearean heroine- she is , (as Harold Bloom states with regard to Shakespearean protagonists) constantly hearing herself speak and think - as evinced in her conversation with Damon Wildeve at the end of Book 1 where she realises that she isn’t in love with him anymore because he has been rejected by another woman.
She is also a mythic hero - in female form. The chapter “The Queen of the Night “ references the antagonist in Mozart’s opera - The Magic Flute but also paints Eustacia as a mythic hero. Compared to a Greek Goddess with all the fickle and tempestuous nature that entails and painted with tragic strokes - she has a fatal flaw and her failure to reckon with it is to be her downfall.
Hardy is also deeply interested in superficial appearances hiding character with depth. We see the Reddlingman Diggory Venn commonly referred to as a Mephistophelean figure - he is red from head to toe, seen burning a fire at the bottom of a pit and appears out of the shadows on the Heath - a source of terror to those who see him. However he is a handsome man, a sensitive man and a clever man who isn’t cunning.
His conversation with Eustacia in which she refuses him thrice has echoes with Christ refusing Satan in the wilderness. The wilderness here is Egdon Heath and the Christlike figure is the mostly uncharitable Eustacia while the devil like Diggory Venn is actually engaged in an act of utmost selflessness. I find these inversions subtle, wonderful and deep to consider.
There are beautiful strains of Dante - with constant references to the devil, the pit and the abyss and the villagers burning a bonfire on Rainbarrow on Guy Fawkes day is reminiscent of the Witches in Macbeth - though there are several inversions at play here again.
I am yet to finish Book 2 but I am loving it and hope I can read more Hardy in the future .
The best, most beautiful and most faithful adaptation of any book to film is John Schlesinger's 1967 movie Far From The Madding Crowd.
Writing to you from the USA, November 8, 2024, and taking refuge in your videos......
Keep them coming Professor McEvoy!
Great video! Far From The Maddening Crowd was my second Hardy, I was pretty young. It never occurred to me that there is a 'how to' read it. I just read it, loved it, then re-read it often I still have my original battered copy.
Thank you so much! Those old battered copies are the most special books in our collection, aren't they? They contain a little piece of us from when we first read these great novels ☺️
@@BenjaminMcEvoy So true!
I am looking forward to reading Hardy with you! I finished Tess earlier this year and I was heartbroken. Hardy has a special place in my heart. His "A Pair of Blue Eyes" was simply sublime. Thank you for a wonderful video, Ben!
Tess is sad, but so incredibly poignant and beautiful. Life is hard.
Thank you for this very helpful review.
You're so welcome! Thank you so much for watching! 🙏☺️
Mr McEvoy can you please give a lecture on the works by Vasili Grossman. His book Life and Fate shook me to the core.
Read it years ago, I enjoy the refreshers from you. Read The Shadow Line by Joseph Conrad in October based on Louise Erdrich list of perfect short novels in The Sentence, another October read.
Alas, my first Thomas Hardy was Tess of the d'Urbervilles. It made me so angry even tho I knew the background of the period, but still. I will go to the store and buy this book so I can have some sweetness to connect to the author. I can imagine you live in the same countryside as the book portray. Thank you for all your videos and podcast, you are a big influence to my bookshelf.
Your videos are an absolute treat. Thank you
Aw, thank you so much. I really appreciate that ☺️
FFMC was the most recent Hardy novell I've read, finishing off "The Big Five" of his fiction.
Since it has a relatively happy ending, especially in view of what came next, I was a little put off.
Mayor of Casterbridge was my first Hardy when I was still a teenager and the one I remember most vividly!
Oh Benjamin. Once again, you have put out the perfect video at the perfect time. I am almost halfway through Far from the Madding Crowd, my first ever read of it and Hardy- and I was really enjoying it however, all of a sudden I’ve been feeling like I hit a wall and have been losing interest. I’ve been contemplating DNF’ing it, but I have no doubt that after I watch your entire video, I will probably change my mind. I’m sure you’ll bring some new insights and tips that will help me get back into it. 😊 I’ll let you know! 😉
Hang in there, J. Just surrender to the smell of the hay, the glow of the embers, the unique characters. Most of the plot is in the final third. Its coming and its worth the wait. You'll be glad you are so grounded in Wessex when you get to it. Enjoy!
Love the new background man!
Thank you so much, my friend!! :)
Hi Ben, I really like Far From The Madding Crowd. My first Hardy novel I read was also Tess. I was 19 and in college, a librarian told me that I couldn't read Tess. I read Tess of the U'drbervilles and enjoyed it. I think Gabriel Oak is one of the nicest and kindest men in english literature. He's there through everything even though Bathsheba sacks him and is so stubborn and selfish. Do you think Bathsheba deserves Gabriel? I always wonder if Bathsheba made Gabriel unhappy in marriage? I love Hardy's descriptions of the seasons and nature. Bathsheba is dazzled by Troy and messes with Boldwood's psychology. I own the Gabriel Oak and Bathsheba rose. I would love to talk to you about these novels and I feel that you wouldn't judge me about my books and dismiss books I love. Thank you for your video. 😊📖
Sasha is so adorable!!! Will you train the puppy yourself?
I've had a copy of FFTMC for a year because I've seen the movies and love the story. But I've been waiting for your how-to video. Thank you so much for this, Benjamin. I can't wait to get into Hardy's world. 💙
Thank you so much! Absolutely! I've been training her and I'm blown away at how intelligent she is. She learns things super quick and gets a lot of fun out of the training. And happy reading with Hardy's great novel! I'd love to know what you make of it and how you think it compares to the movies ☺️
Wow, this is such a wonderful lecture. Thank you so much for posting. I have never read Hardy, but I have this novel sitting on my bookshelf. Hmmm, should I take it up? I think I should. How could I not after listening to this love letter to Hardy.
Aw, thank you so much. I really appreciate that! I'm so happy you're taking Hardy up now. You won't regret it! I'd love to know what you make of the story ☺️
I was in the shower this morning and just thought to myself, "Far from the Madding Crowd. Where have I heard of that before?". I just saw this video notification. Hah.
It's amazing how these things get into our unconscious, isn't it? I always seem to get them come to me in the shower too!
I think I need to start again with Thomas Hardy! Some years ago I read "The well beloved" and I did not like it at all, somehow it didn' t seem real to me. I think I have :The Return of the Native" on my bookshelves. I admire goyw deep knowledge on kiterature and always enjoy your videos.
Can this be... telepathy?? I have just put Far from the madding crowd "on my desk for a reading! Wonderful to get your video this morning!
I love all Hardy's novels!
Ps: if anyone is interested in Hardy's biography, I recommend The chosen, by Elisabeth Lowry, a novel about his somehow"sad"... relationship with his wife Emma . Thanks again!
Thank you, Ben for this book review. Thomas Hardy is a very interesting person :) also, I notice that your videos are getting longer lol, in a good way!
Thank you so much, Sarah!! I'm so happy you're enjoying the longer videos! ☺️
Just got this for my birthday, looking forward to picking it up (btw i also have tess, so which would be a better Hardy to start with in your opinion?)
Happy birthday!! That's a tremendous present right there :) Tess was actually the one I started with, but I would personally say that Far from the Madding Crowd would be the perfect first one to get into Hardy. Tess is a masterpiece, but it's very dark and I find it weighs very heavily upon me!
@@BenjaminMcEvoy oh maybe next time i'll watch the video before commenting as i see you directly answer this question within the first 3 minutes lmao. thanks for your lovely reply nonetheless!
Just finished FFMC , have you not heard of Piddlehinton Benjamin & the place I particularly want to live in Diddling ?
25:38 I finished Othello 5 days ago and I couldn't relate more. Usually dark works make me want to read other works because now I know that the next work will be light in comparison, not the case with this one.
I had a period when I read Hardy's books one after the other, but I don't recommend it. Alternate your reading with something lighter.
I for one appreciate the fact that I get this level of lecture for free.
Hermann Hesse is another writer that connects us to nature in his literary works.
I was wondering why you didn’t make a video for this long. Good job! Keep going! 📖
THOMAS HARDY VIDEO LFG!!!!
This video came up and I now know what my next book is to be! It’ll be my first Hardy (slightly ashamed to admit) 👍
That's so amazing this will be your first Hardy, Tom! This is such a perfect one to start with. I'd love to know what you make of it ☺️
@ really looking forward to it. Thanks for the inspiration, your reviews are hugely interesting and helpful
Hi Ben! it's been a while since I tuned in...Are you currently reading this book in the club? Also, will you post what the list will be for next year (2025)? I commented too early. Couldn't help myself. Congrats on Sasha. She is adorable.
What edition of this book are you reading? Thank You
I'm reading the Oxford World's Classics paperback edition :)
I wonder if I would like reading "Far From the Madding Crowd" in middle-age? I was assigned it for a 10th grade English course (I was 16) and hated it. It was a painful exercise to read it and I quickly forgot it afterwards.
Very good
Thank you, David! :)
I believe Sasha will become the most literary dog among all others on the island. You will enjoy the time reading to her, and seeing which author she expressly devours, and which ones she drops her head to, putting her gaze on some secret dream, and soon vanishes into her own world of make believe.
What’s the set of books on the top left?
Chapman & Chapman Fabri Facsimile of the complete works of Charles Dickens. They came out with a monthly magazine called The Dickens Collection many years ago, but you can get them secondhand online! :)
"Lads, let's reschedule today's plans. Benjamin's dropped another one."
Believe it or not, I swung by my regular bookstore today and saw this one from Hardy, realized after a moment I didn't have it (though I had purchased 2-3 of his other works earlier this year), and ended up buying it.
Appreciate your works as always, and hoping you have been well, my friend.
Thank you very much, Shrinesh! I appreciate that deeply, my friend! I am so happy to hear you got yourself a copy of this phenomenal work! I would love to know what you make of it ☺️
oh, Ben i have recently bought Tess of the d'Urbervilles 🙁
You should definitely still read it! It's a masterpiece. I'd love to know what you make of it :)
@@BenjaminMcEvoy Thank you I will.
Hi, Ben.
All good ?
What an incredible video! His passion for words overflows every line in this video. Your way of embracing and experiencing the love of reading inspires me every day when choosing my readings and re-readings. Your kindness, lightness and passion are contagious and extremely inspiring. thank you for all of this
I really want to read Thomas Hardy :)
kisses from São Paulo in Brazil ❤
* *I'm rereading Jane Eyer and following along with her incredible video
😊
New background unlocked
😆😆😆
Love this read . It means I can put Franks biog of Dostoevsky down (heavy Russian intelegensia) and enjoy some bucolic narrative .
Intelligentsia
13:46 true
I love Thomas Hardy....one of my favorites authors....but I must say, in FFTMC, Boldwood just struck me as a silly comic figure.
My sense of humor is sometimes weird and he was not intended to be humorous, but there was something so ridiculous in him that
I could not help it. Anyway, I preferred some of his other novels as I think he got better and better as time wore on. FFTMC is very good however.
Oooh... I want to hug and play with Sashaaaaaa 😊
She would love that, Olga! Sasha loves a good cuddle! ☺️
@@BenjaminMcEvoy 😊 For suuure, I sense she has a very warm heart. She's sooooo fluffy!
P.S. Thaaank you so much for what you're doing. I discovered your videos about a week ago. I have been devouring them. You ARE helping people! You have a very interesting way of thinking and it is very inspiring. So much that I started to read Emily Dickinson - the same BIG violet edition I saw in one of your videos, bought it in Dublin - basically every day now (as I do have some books in English), the 1800s language is difficult to understand, but maybe something will open up in me. 🙌 You're a really wonderful person! We'll stay friends! Hope to be able to join the book club soooooon.
❤
🥰
Benjamin, I love all these books you have introduced to me, and others, but my wallets nearly empty 😂. PS: have you ever heard of Roberto Bolaños 2666.
💝💕