fuzzyGlu...
- Member since:
- June 13, 2009
- Total points:
- 66 (Level 1)
What are your insights about the book 'Indiana' by George Sand?
I just wanted to know, and if you've read Pride and Prejudice, Sense and Sensibility (by Jane Austen), Glass and Impulse (Ellen Hopkins). Will you please post your insights about it too. Thank you. I need help on my assignment: Ask and compare about the insights of different people about books, and I picked these, since these are the books I was assigned to.
by Rex
- Member since:
- June 07, 2009
- Total points:
- 17839 (Level 6)
- Badge Image:
-
- Contributing In:
- Books & Authors
Best Answer - Chosen by Voters
I recently read a biography of George Sand and it stimulated an interest in reading some of her novels. It wasn't easy to find some, but I did manage to buy 'Indiana' and 'Mauprat' through a second-hand dealer. 'Indiana' is an interesting story of relationships especially between husbands and wives, men and women, nobility and commoners, family and strangers. The central marraige is uncharacteristic of modern Western society in that an older wealthy man has married a young woman for the status of it - he is no more than her friend, and often not even that. But there are many ways in which marraiges can fail either the woman or the man in modern Western society and consequently, for me, the symptoms of what goes on in this novel - even if not the causes - are current in modern society.
Sand's story is engaging and generally well paced. It does seem a bit like a soap opera sometimes. It also rushes to an unsatisfactory ending - a bit like the end of 'Well of Loneliness', which appalled me. But then Sand has a surprise for me - although I have a sneaking feeling that it might be an afterthought, a rewrite. What is distinctive about Sand's writing is her ability to create a visionary scene - like the one where Raymon rails against the picture of Indiana's cousin Ralph hanging in Indiana's bedroom (Raymon is there with his lover of the time - Indiana's serving girl Noun). And then there is the extraordinary scene where Indiana almost drowns in the river only to be rescued by Ralph - we see the world transform itself from Indiana's perspective in the most unsettling way.
I enjoyed this novel immensely and look forward to reading more of Sand's writing.
Other Answers (1)
-
by 80ist
- Member since:
- October 19, 2009
- Total points:
- 5160 (Level 5)
- Badge Image:
-
- Contributing In:
- Homework Help
The novel blends the conventions of romanticism, realism, and idealism. The novel is about love and marriage.
At the end of the novel comes a conclusion, a young adventurer's account of finding a man and woman, Ralph and Indiana, living on an isolated plantation. This conclusion has been subject to much scrutiny.
Source(s):
wikipedia.org