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The Fortunes and Misfortunes of the Famous Moll Flanders

3.2(3)
Language
English
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About the book

First published in 1722, The Fortunes and Misfortunes of the Famous Moll Flanders is a pioneering work of English prose fiction, cast as the penitent autobiography of a woman who survives poverty through seduction, marriage, theft, and reinvention. Defoe's plain, circumstantial style lends documentary force to Moll's extraordinary career, placing the novel within early eighteenth-century traditions of criminal biography, spiritual confession, and picaresque adventure. Beneath its sensational surface lies a sharp inquiry into gender, money, morality, and social mobility. Daniel Defoe, a Dissenter, merchant, journalist, and prolific political writer, was unusually attentive to the precarious lives produced by commerce, debt, and urban expansion. His own experiences of bankruptcy, imprisonment, and public controversy helped shape his fascination with survival in a competitive society. In Moll, Defoe transforms economic necessity and moral compromise into the materials of modern fiction. This book is recommended to readers interested in the origins of the English novel, feminist literary history, or the moral contradictions of capitalism. Moll Flanders remains compelling because it refuses easy judgment: its heroine is sinner, victim, strategist, and survivor at once.

Editions (21)

ISBN9788028374167
PublisherSharp Ink
Publication Date05/15/24
Pages252

Reviews & Ratings

3 ratings

1 reviews

3.2

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  • 3.0

    May contain spoilers! Moll Flanders is an interesting read. I did enjoy it, but again and again I found myself questioning the decisions Moll makes throughout her life. At heart, all she seems to want is a stable marriage and financial security — a life in which she does not have to fear poverty. Yet she repeatedly ends up in unstable situations: returning to prostitution, marrying several times, and having many children with whom she has little to no contact. Strikingly, she appears to care deeply for only two or three of them, which makes her character both fascinating and unsettling. This may be an unpopular opinion, but I sometimes wondered whether Moll might have lived a happier life if she had stayed with her brother in Virginia instead of fleeing solely because their relationship was incestuous. The relationship did not necessarily have to remain sexual; perhaps a platonic companionship would have been enough to provide her with the stability she so desperately sought. At the same time, even considering this possibility feels uncomfortable, which highlights the moral tension at the heart of the novel. I also believe that, had it not been for her mother and the story she tells — one shaped by fear, guilt and punishment — Moll’s life might have taken a very different course. Without that influence, she may well have found happiness, even in circumstances that society would have condemned.

    Dec 20, 2025

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