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"The Widowing of Mrs. Holroyd" is a powerful and intense novel by D. H. Lawrence that explores the complexities of marriage and the impact of abuse and infidelity on a family. The novel is set in a coal-mining community in England, where Mrs. Holroyd, a strong and resilient woman, is married to a brutish and abusive husband who has been unfaithful to her with another woman. The story revolves around the relationship between Mrs. Holroyd and her husband, and the tensions that arise between them due to his infidelity and abusive behavior. As the story unfolds, Mrs. Holroyd finds herself…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"The Widowing of Mrs. Holroyd" is a powerful and intense novel by D. H. Lawrence that explores the complexities of marriage and the impact of abuse and infidelity on a family. The novel is set in a coal-mining community in England, where Mrs. Holroyd, a strong and resilient woman, is married to a brutish and abusive husband who has been unfaithful to her with another woman. The story revolves around the relationship between Mrs. Holroyd and her husband, and the tensions that arise between them due to his infidelity and abusive behavior. As the story unfolds, Mrs. Holroyd finds herself struggling to maintain her sense of self-worth and dignity in the face of her husband's cruel treatment. Will she get successful to get her self-respect back? Will her husband ever get any lessons for his wrong behavior? Throughout the novel, Lawrence's prose is powerful and evocative, painting a vivid portrait of life in a coal-mining town and the struggles faced by working-class women in an oppressive and patriarchal society.
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Autorenporträt
D.H. Lawrence, or David Herbert Lawrence, was an English author of novels, short tales, poems, plays, essays, travel guides, and letters. He was born in Eastwood, Nottinghamshire, England, on September 11, 1885, and passed away in Vence, France, on March 2, 1930. He became one of the most important English authors of the 20th century because of his novels Sons and Lovers (1913), The Rainbow (1915), and Women in Love (1920). Lawrence never again resided in England after the First World War. He and his wife left for Italy in 1919. Soon after, he started writing a series of books that included The Lost Girl (1920), and Aaron's Rod (1922). All three books are divided into two sections, with the tribal ritual of mate-finding taking center stage in the first and the central character venturing to Europe in the second. All three books have open-ended conclusions, but in Mr. Noon, Lawrence delivers his protagonist Lawrence's firsthand account of his time in Germany in 1912 with Frieda, carrying on the lighthearted theme he introduced in Sons and Lovers. Lawrence made the decision to leave Europe in 1921 and travel to the US, Australia, and Sri Lanka.