Lady Chatterley's Lover
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Publisher:
London - Vintage Books
Pages:
277
Series:
ISBN:
9780099541653, 0099541653
Language:
English
Awards & Distinctions:
Fiction, New, 2011_10
Statement of responsibility:
D.H. Lawrence with an introduction by Blake Morrison
Physical description:
xiv, 277 p. ; 20 cm
Library Identifier
2670688
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Comment
Add a CommentRequired reading for wives and servants. LCL caused a scandal when it first came out, and a bigger scandal when it was re-issued in the 1950s, and many fine people defended it against pornography charges. Of course, it is pornography, in the sense that it is "completely concerned with sex." Yes, there are characters, but they are two-dimensional. (In case you didn't get the message that Chatterley is a baddie, and worse, "not a real man", he is the lord of the manor AND a ruthless mine owner, AND a successful author, but oh! such a cold and cynical one. How unlike a working-class hero with the initials DHL.) Still, Lawrence is an artist and no fool, and he writes about sexuality in a way that was never before attempted. Some of his conclusions are iffy (be satisfied with vaginal intercourse, ladies, or you're not a real woman -- or a lesbian.)
Good, if you can handle the awkwardness of the subject matter inside.
One of the famous literature classics which was considered to have too much "sex" due to the nature of the story.
A liaison with a gardener no less!
While not scandalous by current standards it is certainly a fabulous use of prose.
This story was timeless in the paralells with our current crisis of heart vs. business...