# Wives and Daughters

> Elizabeth Gaskell’s great domestic novel of family change, courtship, social nuance, and moral intelligence.

Price: 9.00 USD · in stock

## About
Wives and Daughters is Elizabeth Gaskell’s large, richly observant novel of provincial life, family rearrangement, emotional education, and social ambiguity. At its center is Molly Gibson, whose clear moral intelligence has to navigate a world shaped by remarriage, vanity, class aspiration, scientific ambition, and the quiet pressures of English respectability. Gaskell combines domestic intimacy with sharp social perception, allowing everyday conversation and household tension to accumulate into a remarkably subtle portrait of character.ThemesThe novel explores family loyalty, step-relations, courtship, social performance, sincerity, and the collision between inner worth and public impression. It is deeply interested in how affection and misunderstanding move through ordinary life, and in the way a young woman learns to interpret motives without losing generosity.Why readers still return to itReaders return to Wives and Daughters for its emotional intelligence, memorable ensemble cast, and unusually patient understanding of how people reveal themselves over time. It remains one of the great nineteenth-century domestic novels.Further contextPublished serially in the 1860s and left unfinished at Gaskell’s death, the novel has long been admired for the completeness of its world and the maturity of its social vision.

## Specifications
- author: Elizabeth Gaskell
- publisher: DotBooks
- imprint: DotBooks
- synopsis: Elizabeth Gaskell’s great domestic novel of family change, courtship, social nuance, and moral intelligence.
- language: en
- binding: Perfect Bound
- pages: 874
- format: paperback
- oclc: 1867083
- openlibrary: OL1103200W
