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Of Human Bondage (Penguin Twentieth Century Classics)

Of Human Bondage (Penguin Twentieth Century Classics)

List Price: $21.05
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: not of human bondage
Review: Not quite what I expected. For the similarly misguided I instead recommend 'S&M: Studies in Dominance & Submission' by Thomas S. Weinberg, and Juliette by Marquis De Sade.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Classic Maugham
Review: Of Human Bondage is Maugham's most note worthy piece of work. It made the top 100 for this century. It is an epic novel about the life of Philip Carey: a boy whose parent's die and is forced to live with his aunt and uncle. The story takes place in England in the late 1800's.

Philip is a smart boy and enjoys reading. This is his saving grace being that he was born with a club foot and is unfit for physical labor. He grows up under a harsh religious life, his uncle being a Vicar in a country church. Philip is quick to lose his belief in religion when he goes off to boarding school where he was relentlessly teased for his limp and foot. He is unsure of what he wants out of life, but eventually tires of school and desires to be an artist.

In Paris, while studying art, he meets several friends. In addition, he realizes he is a mediocre artist. Giving up art he attempts to take on accounting and then tries to be a doctor. The story becomes a little more traumatic when Philip meets a waitress named Mildred. Much of the book is dedicated to her and his unrequited love for her. She is plain and not very winsome, however Philip falls for her hard. Mildred takes him for several rides: borrowing money and eventually moving in with him (platonically). However, Mildred continues to see other men while seeing Philip and takes advantage of Philip horrendously.

This book is not for those who are shy at large page counts. It is long and often times fairly dry. Maugham has several key pages though that he uses to describe the meaning of life, which is the point of this book. Maugham seems to feel that there is no point in life except misery, which is a curse of being human. Also there are strong atheist view points expressed. However, Maugham does seem to hold some redeeming value in the human aspect of love.

Despite Philip being handicapped, I didn't find feeling much sympathy for him. Many times I felt he whined a bit much. However, the times in England were tough and the descriptions of the poor rival Jack London's "The People of the Abyss." Overall, though, this book failed to meet my expectations. It was good reading, but "A Christmas Holiday" by Maugham was much better.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Inside the head of Philip Carey
Review: Probably the most intimate and in depth coming of age story I've ever read, our protagonist is a sensitive and intelligent man brought up in tightly controlled circumstances, with Christian values and years of English boarding school, this is the story of his life struggle to find his own path and also a study of human obsession. "Of Human Bondage" covers 30 years or so in the life of Philip Carey from the time he was orphaned upon the death of his mother and sent to live with his paternal uncle, a country clergyman and his wife until he reaches his thirties.

Through Philip's eyes, the reader get a detailed view of a number of European settings at the turn at the turn of the century - The English countryside, boarding school, a boarding house in Heidelberg Germany, accountant apprentice in a dreary London financial institution, the Paris art world, a London hospital, a village by the sea, the shops - Maugham really has the ability to take you there. This is also an excellent look at the English social order, especially the working class poor.

I found the book difficult to put down at first it is an almost too painful and intimate view into the emotions of a lonely, sensitive and crippled orphan. Real and right up front, you will feel some of Phillip's pain. At some point though, which seems to vary depending on the reader's taste or focus the book really takes off and becomes a page turner, for me it was when he started to pursue medicine and went to the hospital, it seemed to me that was when Philip had found the path and his life took off, although there was still some backsliding when he encountered Mildred one more time.

Relevant to anyone who has been caught in an masochistic obsessive relationship, timeless in that sense, although the setting describes a way of life gone forever

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Possibly the best book I have read
Review: This book has everything - a fascinating main character, interesting minor characters and exploits the theme of human suffering at an emotional and physical level.

Maugham is masterful in the way he carries the reader on Philip Carey's journey so that you are almost pleading with the character not to follow the road he is taking.

Possibly the best description is when he falls to his lowest point as a shop assistant and the indignities he is forced to endure in order to survive. Although there is a tendency sometimes to criticize him for his foolhardiness, as a reader you are ultimately drawn into sympathising with the plight of this relatively inexperienced young man.

I am hard put to think of any modern novel that has it all as this book does. Although I have read his other novels, I believe Maugham really surpassed himself when writing this fantastic book which I re-read every few years and always enjoy. Only Thomas Hardy comes close in terms of examining man's emotional suffering at the hands of a woman - something that he strongly experienced in his married life.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Infactuation, Deception, and the Meaning of Life....
Review: W. Somerset Maugham weaves an intriguing tale of love and betrayal in his critically acclaimed "Of Human Bondage." Maugham uses the tale of Phillip, an innocent, sensitive crippled man in Victorian era Europe as a front for his own autobiography. Maugham's brilliant prose and insights into the human psyche make this book a true classic. Phillip Carey was left an orphan at a young age and was continually taunted for his club-foot and the limp that resulted. His early rejection from society gives him time to seek out his purpose in life, and we follow him as he travels across Europe. Maugham gives beautiful descriptions of England, France, and Germany along the way. Phillip's troubles begin when he meets a cold, stand-offish waitress named Mildred. Phillip is consumned with a burning passion for this girl, and gave everything he had to make her his. Though he was constantly rejected, humilitated and used by Mildred, he continued to return to her. This book is truly great for the indepth examination of love and the human animal. Any lover of psychology will find this novel to be a facinating read, as would anyone who can appreciate a good book.


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