“The changing of the old order in country manors and mansions may be slow or sudden, may have many issues romantic or otherwise.” —Thomas Hardy, from the preface
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- A Laodicean
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By Thomas Hardy
Read by Clive Chafer
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Release Date: 4/26/16
Formats: Digital Audy
Paula Power, the daughter of a wealthy railway magnate, inherits De Stancy Castle, an ancient castle in need of modernization. She commissions a young architect from London, George Somerset, to undertake the work. Somerset falls in love with Paula. But Paula, the Laodicean of the title, meaning a person who is lukewarm or halfhearted, is torn between George’s admiration and that of Captain De Stancy, whose old-world romanticism contrasts with Somerset’s forward-looking outlook.
Paula’s vacillation in her romantic life is also reflected in her views about religion, politics, and social progress, a dilemma faced by people in the Victorian era as industrialization was beginning to greatly change their lives. Paula will have to decide between the two men, however, or risk losing them both.
- A Laodicean
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By Thomas Hardy
Read by Clive Chafer
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Release Date: 4/26/16
Formats: Digital Audy
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- Two on a Tower
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By Thomas Hardy
Read by Wanda McCaddon
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Release Date: 11/24/15
Formats: Digital Audy
Thomas Hardy’s moving story of star-crossed lovers shows human beings at the mercy of forces beyond their control, setting a tragic drama of human passion against a backdrop of space and scientific discovery.
Unhappily married, Lady Constantine defies social standards when she falls in love with the youthful and socially inferior Swithin St. Cleeve. In an ancient monument converted into an astronomical observatory, they isolate themselves from society and create their own private universe—until the pressures of the outside world threaten to tear them apart.
- Two on a Tower
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By Thomas Hardy
Read by Wanda McCaddon
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Release Date: 11/24/15
Formats: Digital Audy
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- Under the Greenwood Tree
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By Thomas Hardy
Read by Robert Hardy
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Release Date: 12/01/12
Formats: Digital Audy
Under the Greenwood Tree is Hardy’s most charming novel using, as it does, the four seasons of the Wessex year as a backdrop for the delightful romance of the young Dick Dewy and Fancy Day, the local school mistress. The story of the ups and downs of their courtship is set alongside the story of the rustics who form the Mellstock church choir and their struggle against the introduction of a church organ which threatens their very existence.
- Under the Greenwood Tree
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By Thomas Hardy
Read by Robert Hardy
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Release Date: 12/01/12
Formats: Digital Audy
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- Jude the Obscure
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By Thomas Hardy
Read by Stephen Thorne
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Release Date: 4/01/12
Formats: Digital Audy
Jude Fawley is a stone mason with a passion for scholarship who longs to study at the nearby university town of Christminster. Then Arabella Donn comes into his life. His longing for her eclipses all else for a time, and they marry but unhappily. Meeting his spirited and intelligent cousin, Sue Bridehead, Jude dares to dream again. But in acknowledging their feelings for one another, Jude and Sue risk becoming social outcasts. In defying conventional morality, their lives become plagued by uncertainty and torment.
- Jude the Obscure
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By Thomas Hardy
Read by Stephen Thorne
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Release Date: 4/01/12
Formats: Digital Audy
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- Tess of the D’Urbervilles
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By Thomas Hardy
Read by Ralph Cosham
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Release Date: 6/01/08
Formats: Digital Audy
Thomas Hardy's novel of seduction and abandonment introduced his most memorable tragic heroine, the unworldly maiden Tess. On her morning journey to earn money for her impoverished family, Tess' horse has an accident, forcing her to seek assistance from some newly rich relatives. There, she is vigorously pursued by Alec, who corners her in a field one night and takes advantage of her. After bearing a child who quickly dies, Tess meets and falls in love with Angel, a minister's son who is infatuated with the image of Tess as the pure country maid. But when he learns the truth of her past, he shuns his new bride and leaves Tess once again to fend for herself in a world where she is only valued for her uses to others.
Explanatory Note to the First Edition of Tess of the D'Urbervilles:
"In respect of the book's opinions and sentiments, I would ask any too genteel reader, who cannot endure to have said what everybody nowadays thinks and feels, to remember a well-worn sentence of St. Jerome's: If an offence come out of the truth, better is it that the offence come than that the truth be concealed."
Thomas Hardy, November 1891
- Tess of the D’Urbervilles
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By Thomas Hardy
Read by Ralph Cosham
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Release Date: 6/01/08
Formats: Digital Audy
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- The Mayor of Casterbridge
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By Thomas Hardy
Read by Pamela Garelick
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Release Date: 11/01/01
Formats: Digital Audy
From its astonishing opening scene, in which the drunken Michael Henchard sells his wife and daughter at a country fair, to the breathtaking series of discoveries at its conclusion, The Mayor of Casterbridge claims a unique place among Thomas Hardy's finest and most powerful novels.
Rooted in an actual case of wife selling in early nineteenth-century England, the story builds into an awesome Sophoclean drama of guilt and revenge, in which the strong, willful Henchard rises to a position of wealth and power, only to achieve a most bitter downfall. Proud, obsessed, ultimately committed to his own destruction, Henchard is, as Albert Guerard has said, "Hardy's Lord Jim...his only tragic hero and one of the greatest tragic heroes in all fiction."
- The Mayor of Casterbridge
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By Thomas Hardy
Read by Pamela Garelick
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Release Date: 11/01/01
Formats: Digital Audy
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- Under the Greenwood Tree
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By Thomas Hardy
Read by Simon Vance
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Release Date: 12/01/99
Formats: Digital Audy
One of the most popular of Hardy’s novels, this charming pastoral idyll is a lightly humorous depiction of life in an early Victorian rural community. Drawn from Hardy’s childhood memories, it represents, he said, “a true picture at first hand of the personages, ways, and customs which were common in the villages.”
The story delicately balances the concerns of the Mellstock parish choir with a romance between Dick Dewy, a member of the choir, and Fancy Day, the village schoolmistress. While the choir battles for its survival against the new vicar’s mechanical church organ, personal conflicts arise over the anachronistic customs of tradition.
- Under the Greenwood Tree
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By Thomas Hardy
Read by Simon Vance
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Release Date: 12/01/99
Formats: Digital Audy
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- Jude the Obscure
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By Thomas Hardy
Read by Frederick Davidson
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Release Date: 12/01/98
Formats: Digital Audy
His last and most controversial novel, Jude the Obscure provoked such widespread and bitter attacks that Hardy claimed it caused him to stop writing novels. The primary causes of the uproar involved Hardy’s frank treatment of sexual themes and his unconventional portrayal of the pillars of Victorian society: the British university system, marriage, and religion. Today, many consider this to be Hardy’s finest work.
The story involves the tragic relationship between Jude Fawley, a village stonemason who is thwarted in his aspirations to the ministry, and Sue Bridehead, a freethinking cousin who is shunned by society for her social and sexual rebellion. Concerned with the annihilation of innocence, Jude the Obscure is powerful in its portrayal of suffering, rich in its evocation of nature, and tragic in its vision of life.
- Jude the Obscure
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By Thomas Hardy
Read by Frederick Davidson
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Release Date: 12/01/98
Formats: Digital Audy
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- The Trumpet-Major
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By Thomas Hardy
Read by Simon Vance
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Release Date: 1/01/96
Formats: Digital Audy
Set against the larger-than-life backdrop of the Napoleonic wars, Hardy’s only historical novel tells of the loves and sorrows of ordinary people caught in extraordinary times.
When an anticipated invasion brings several regiments to her small rural community, young country maid Anne Garland is courted by three men in uniform: the loyal trumpet-major John Loveday, his sailor-brother Bob, and cowardly Festus Derriman of the yeomanry cavalry.
Founded largely on testimony from elders known to Hardy in his childhood, The Trumpet-Major offers a complex weave of historical fact and fiction that explores the subversive effects of ordinary human desires on systematized versions of history.
- The Trumpet-Major
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By Thomas Hardy
Read by Simon Vance
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Release Date: 1/01/96
Formats: Digital Audy
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- The Return of the Native
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By Thomas Hardy
Read by Wanda McCaddon
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Release Date: 4/01/95
Formats: Digital Audy
In the barren moor of Egdon Heath, a wild tract of country in the southwest of England, one native yearns to escape to city life while another has just returned from that life, unimpressed.
Clym Yeobright, a former diamond merchant in Paris, returns home to become a schoolmaster in Egdon, where he falls passionately in love with the sensuous, free-spirited Eustacia Vye. Infatuated with his seeming glamour, she marries him in hopes of greater adventure—but when her hopes are disappointed, she rekindles an affair with Clym's reckless cousin, Damon.
Injured by forces beyond their control, Hardy's characters struggle vainly in the net of destiny.In the end, only the face of the lonely heath remains untouched by fate. This masterpiece of tragic passion perfectly epitomizes the author's melancholy genius.
- The Return of the Native
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By Thomas Hardy
Read by Wanda McCaddon
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Release Date: 4/01/95
Formats: Digital Audy