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The Scarlet Letter

The Scarlet Letter

List Price: $3.95
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A classic
Review: The Scarlet Letter is the best Hawthorne book ever written. This book has a good moral value to it and when you read this book you need to let your emotions take over. If you let the emotions take over you will get more out of the story. Through out this book Hawthorne shows his unique writing style. His writing style is long sentences and good vocabulary words to describe what he means. This book talks about how two people of different backgrounds can get along and fall in love. Their town doesn't accept people like that so therefore the women had to wear a scarlet letter "A" on her chest. In this book there is a lot of guilt, revenge, and pride. There is a lot of guilt involved because of the lady having an affair and she has to wear the letter "A" on her chest. This book shows pride also because she does not let the letter and the people of the town bring her down. Her life stayed the same as it was before her affair with another man. The ending in this book is really good. It is weird how they find out that the preacher is the one who had the affair with the lady.
Hawthorne wrote this book many years ago and now it fits perfect into our life. We have a lot of relationships in this world of people with different ethic and religious backgrounds. So this book puts into perspective of what it was like to have a relationship with someone not like you back in the late 1800's early 1900's. Who would have ever thought that this book would be so close in relationship to how we live now? This book is such a great book to read. So I think that everyone should read this book and let their emotions take over and they will feel this book.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: AAAAAAAAAA
Review: Scarlet Letter is a kind of book that you understand it and you love it or you dont understand it and hate it. I think this deserves four stars because of the idea of the book. A stand for adultry in this book and tells the story of puritans in that time period. Hester and Pearl faces lots of insult in this community and if you want to find out whot the secret father of Pearl is READ the BOOK!!! But I would recommend to read this book after you are 14 years, because the Idea of the book is too matured.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Scarlet Letter
Review: One ofthe greatest novels in all of literature, The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne, tells of a life vastly different from those that we live today. Rejecting the present permissive lifestyle to which we were accustomed, the reader is entrenched in the gloom and doom of Puritan society. It is an exposure to a law that tells what to wear, how to think, and whom to love. The Scarlet Letter is a story of law versus human nature, hypocrisy, and of undeniable passions.
Enlightening and refreshing, the reader is taken on an adventure and fully understands the risks of living passionately, beyond the limits that society sets. A novel that can be enjoyed by all ages, The Scarlet Letter is a masterpiece of its time.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I revisited this book recently
Review: I first read this book in 10th grade and breezed through it. A few weeks ago, I had to reread this book for my English class. With the plot not so fresh in my mind, I picked up the book again and was amazed at what I initially brushed off. While the idea of a married woman being forced to wear a scarlet A on her chest for producing a child born out of an affair would be improbable today, the story contains many truths about sin, revenge, love, guilt. Also, though some might disagree, his writing is amazing and a joy to read. Pick up this book again, you'll enjoy it.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: AP Language Review for The Scarlet Letter
Review: One of the greatest novels in all of literature, The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne tells of a life vastly different from those that we live today. Rejecting the present permissive lifestyle to which we are accustomed, the reader is entrenched in the gloom and doom of Puritan society. It is an exposure to a law that tells us what to wear, how to think, and whom to love. The Scarlet Letter is a story of law versus human nature, hypocrisy, and of undeniable passions.
Enlightening and refreshing, the reader is taken on an adventure and fully understands the risks of living passionately, beyond the limits that society sets. A novel that can be enjoyed by all ages, The Scarlet Letter is a masterpiece of its time.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: I Don't See the Big Deal
Review: I had to read this book, which I had heard quite a bit about, for school but after reading it I had no idea why it is considered such a classic. There is no question that the language is old-fashioned and difficult, but that isn't the only problem I found with it. The whole story was rather boring. It seemed that the author tried to make a lightweight story about an affair and the child that was a product of it deeper or more important by describing how the characters felt. The book was not exactly bad, but, like many other books, it does not really deserve its status as a classic. I saw it more as a book that showed somewhat the morals and ideas of the Puritans. While it is good in that sense, I don't think that it is very important in modern times, and it certainly wasn't a fun read.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: puritans and no witches, what's the deal?
Review: I was truly amazed upon completion of the Scarlet Letter. In no way was I mesmerized by Hawthorne's brilliant imagery, or even his sublime command of the english language in which the general book reading community seems to revel. On the contrary, I was mystified at how one seeming normal man was able to select the exact combination of phonemes necessary to initiate a neurological cascade leading to an undebiably unconscious state. It was unbelievable really. I would literally pick up this book at noon, and be quite asleep and 12:15. Forget valium folks, this is cheaper and more effective. The "A" on Hester's chest should have stood for awful. Or better yet, anteater. No relation to any themes really, I just think that it's a funny little mammal. At least if this were the case, Hester's plight would have been slightly amusing. As it was, however, the only treacle to the unending dolor was the last page. Not the actual ending mind you, but just the quality of actually being done.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Good literature, but not a pleasure read.
Review: Having re-read this book for the first time in two decades, I have no trouble understanding why it is a staple of high school literature classes everywhere. It's a great book for teaching symbolism, foreshadowing and some of the themes of the romantic movement. However, as an adult, I pretty much found it to be an excruciating reading experience, and I'm not just talking about the fact that the language is dense and dreary. The very things that make it a valuable teaching tool can be very annoying to a more experienced reader. As I was reading I kept wanting to scream every time Hawthorne talked about the scarlet letter burning, glowing or being like a painful brand. I got it already! I can put up with slogging through the nineteenth century prose if I'm going to be challenged a little, but this book no longer did it for me.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Great Examination of Christianity
Review: While the life of a modern person of Christian faith may not be well-reflected in this book, the ideas are.

The struggle of legalism vs. liberality... truth vs. lies... faith vs. fear. Boiled down, in one respect, is the question of what makes a true Christianity, the sort who has as much integrity as claimed. Living as Christ would live is a high standard, and Hawthorne demonstrates the multi-layered issues fallible people deal with.

True to the genre and period of writing, Hawthorne is as much of a character as the ones he writes about. While today's novels are embroiled in myopic first person narratives, "The Scarlet Letter" enjoys the psychological unravelling of characters through analysis, observation and deduction.

"The Scarlet Letter" asks questions we no longer ask, and draws out intrigue as the reader page-by-page wonders what is the best response to a Christian woman who has given birth outside of wedlock, and what response is appropriate for the dodging minister. When is it hypocrisy and when is it simple inconsistency?

I fully recommend this book.

Anthony Trendl

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the Greatest Books Ever Written
Review: The Scarlet Letter is an excellent book. Hawthorne spends so much time discussing the characters' thoughts and motives that by the end of the book, you can understand why the people act the way they do. It makes them seem almost real. He relates nature to what the character's are experiencing that makes the story even more powerful. In one place he told of a rose bush that grew by the prison so it seemed Nature was saying that even though other people had abandoned them, someone could always count on the nature's love. It's very beautifully written. The story of adultery and jealous spouses happens in our own day which makes The Scarlet Letter relate to the reader. It's just a great book all over, and I feel that it's one of the best ever written.


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