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""Double Harness"" by Anthony Hope provides an exploration of marriage, revealing the necessity of collaboration, mutual respect, and personal growth for a relationship to thrive. The novel delves into the complexities of partnership, showing that a successful marriage requires more than just love-it demands compromise, understanding, and the ability to evolve together. While seemingly a romance, the book also confronts much darker, often unspoken issues of the time, such as child abuse, spousal abuse, infidelity, and abortion. These themes are addressed with surprising depth and frankness for…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
""Double Harness"" by Anthony Hope provides an exploration of marriage, revealing the necessity of collaboration, mutual respect, and personal growth for a relationship to thrive. The novel delves into the complexities of partnership, showing that a successful marriage requires more than just love-it demands compromise, understanding, and the ability to evolve together. While seemingly a romance, the book also confronts much darker, often unspoken issues of the time, such as child abuse, spousal abuse, infidelity, and abortion. These themes are addressed with surprising depth and frankness for the period, making the novel stand out as both gritty and progressive in its treatment of serious social issues. In doing so, Hope moves beyond the typical romantic tropes of turn-of-the-century literature, offering readers a raw and thought-provoking examination of the challenges and moral dilemmas faced within marriage and relationships. His willingness to tackle subjects gives the novel a strikingly modern sensibility, even for its time.
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Autorenporträt
Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins, as Anthony Hope (9 February 1863 - 8 July 1933), was a British novelist and playwright. He was a prolific writer, particularly of adventure stories, yet he is best known for only two works: The Prisoner of Zenda (1894) and its sequel Rupert of Hentzau (1898). These writings, considered "minor classics" of English literature, are set in the contemporaneous fictional kingdom of Ruritania and gave rise to the Ruritanian romance genre, which includes books set in fictional European places comparable to the novels. Zenda has inspired numerous adaptations, most notably the 1937 Hollywood film of the same name and the 1952 remake. Hope attended St John's School, Leatherhead, Marlborough College, and Balliol College, Oxford. In an intellectually distinguished career at Oxford, he earned first-class honours in Classical Moderations (Literis Graecis et Latinis) in 1882 and Literae Humaniores ('Greats') in 1885. Hope studied law and became a barrister in 1887, when the Middle Temple called him to the Bar. He studied under the future Liberal Prime Minister H. H. Asquith, who saw him as a potential barrister but was disillusioned by his decision to pursue a career in writing.