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North and South

4.0(50)
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About the book

Elizabeth Gaskell’s beloved Victorian classic examines social class, integrity, and the tensions between solidarity and autonomy, through the lens of England’s Industrial Revolution—freshly presented with an introduction by bestselling author Adelle Waldman

Nineteen-year-old Margaret Hale is devastated when her father unexpectedly gives up their family’s financial security and their picturesque country home in southern England for the dingy northern manufacturing city of Milton. Raised among high London society, Margaret is horrified by the north—full of clattering machinery; a surly, plain-spoken populace; and a bitter class divide between factory owners and workers.

Fitting neatly into neither class, Margaret moves on the outskirts of both circles—meeting the brusque, rigidly-principled factory owner Mr. Thornton, as well as the union leader Mr. Higgins and his invalid daughter Bessy. While Margaret seeks to reconcile her southern upbringing with the north’s ideals of commerce and self-sufficiency, she must also balance her parents’ increasing dependence on her as well as a heavy family secret and her own acute sense of unbelonging.

As Margaret’s pride and ingrained biases tangle with her strong conscience and a growing sense of moral outrage, she clashes again and again in outspoken debates with Mr. Thornton, who comes to admire her despite Margaret’s own disregard. But after the union calls for a town-wide strike, Margaret’s perceptions of her old life and her new home in Milton—and of the people who live there—are shaken to the core.

In this celebrated social classic, Elizabeth Gaskell presents a richly-drawn moral heroine, an aching romance, and an industry town on the knife’s edge of labor revolt—with a prescient insight and empathy that feel more than a century ahead of their time.

Editions (25)

ISBN9798217197262
PublisherRandom House Publishing Group
Publication Date12/08/26
Pages560

Reviews & Ratings

50 ratings

7 reviews

4.0

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  • lealifee
    lealifee

    20 Followers

    this was fine. Feels like the blueprint for the slow burn and miscommunication trope. I have one question tho: why is everyone dying

    Jun 3, 2026

  • psor
    psor

    5 Followers

    5.0

    It takes a lot for a romance plot to capture me, but this one managed to do so (neglecting the fact that the main obstacle was the apparent impossibility in Victorian society for a short, clarifying talk between a man and a woman, which is kind of annoying when viewed from today). Margaret Hale is a great character and so is Thornton - who'd have thunk it that I could develop sympathies for an English industrialist from the 1800s, a class of people I commonly hold up as examples of the word 'despicable'?! But you live and you learn. Nevertheless, the book would not have been half as enjoyable without the aspect of the class and social struggle in the industrial north of England being a central focus, the fight between the capitalists and the workers. And while I still hold in my lefty heart that the view presented here is somewhat rose-coloured, it was still very satisfying and treated every character with the humanity they deserved. And I too change perpetually - now this, now that - now disappointed and peevish because all is not exactly as I had pictured it, and now suddenly discovering that the reality is far more beautiful than I imagined it.

    Feb 23, 2024

  • 3.0

    It is an old book and I had quite some trouble understanding everything, especially from the Higginses with their written northers dialect. However, I liked the people and was able to understand and connect with the main characters. Margaret and John clearly care and respect each other from the beginning, John's romantic feelings are very obvious early on. The changing of Margarets feelings was not that "clear" to me, but otherwise very cute love story. There are too many deaths in this in my taste though. I read it mostly, because I really liked the 2004 TV show.

    Mar 11, 2025

3 of 7 reviews

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