Middlemarch, George Eliot
Middlemarch, George Eliot
List: $15.00 | Sale: $10.50
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Middlemarch

Author: George Eliot

Narrator: QingyeWuchen

Unabridged: 30 hr 33 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: HongMei Zhou

Published: 05/05/2026


Synopsis

Middlemarch is George Eliot’s masterpiece—a panoramic portrait of provincial life that Virginia Woolf called “one of the few English novels written for grown-up people.”
Set in the fictional English Midlands town of Middlemarch in the years 1829–1832, on the eve of the First Reform Bill, the novel interweaves the lives of its inhabitants with astonishing depth and compassion. At its heart are two stories of thwarted idealism. Dorothea Brooke, a fervent, intelligent young woman, makes a disastrous marriage to Edward Casaubon, a dried‑up scholar who mistakes pedantry for wisdom, trapping her in a union that crushes her spirit. Tertius Lydgate, a brilliant young doctor full of reformist zeal, marries the beautiful but shallow Rosamond Vincy, only to find his ambitions slowly suffocated by debt and domestic discord around him.
Around these central figures, Eliot weaves a web of unforgettable characters: the hypocritical banker Bulstrode, whose secret past eventually unravels; Fred Vincy, a charming but aimless young man who must learn responsibility; Mary Garth, the novel’s most quietly wise and grounded voice; and Will Ladislaw, Casaubon’s idealistic young cousin, whose passion for Dorothea offers her the possibility of real happiness.
First published in eight parts in 1871–72, Middlemarch shocked Victorian readers with its unflinching psychological realism and its radical critique of the limited options available to intelligent women. But what endures is not its challenge to convention, but its profound, generous humanity. Eliot’s guiding belief is stated in the novel itself: “The growing good of the world is partly dependent on unhistoric acts”—and it is precisely in the quiet dramas of ordinary lives, in flawed choices made and unmade, that she discovers epic significance.
This audiobook is based on the 1871–72 public domain text. Produced and narrated by Qingye Wuchen, with AI assistance.

About George Eliot

George Eliot is the masculine pen name of Mary Ann Evans (1819–1880), one of Victorian England's leading novelists. Her first stories appeared in Blackwood's magazine, followed by such novels as The Mill on the Floss, Silas Marner, and Middlemarch. Her work was popular with critics and the public alike, and in later years her novels were especially valued for their detailed portrayals of rural English life.


Reviews

Goodreads review by emma on March 29, 2022

welcome to...MIDDLEMARCH MARCH. this book is a calm cool and collected 880 pages long, so elle and i will be tackling three chapters a day...every day for this whole month. join us as we melt our minds. i love a project! DAY 1: CHAPTERS 1-3 immediately i am having fun. approx 30 pages per day for 31 da......more

Goodreads review by Siobhan on December 04, 2013

Best. Goddamned. Book. Ever. Seriously, this shit's bananas. B-A-N-A-N-A-S. 750 pages in, and you're still being surprised. It's 800 pages long and EVERY SINGLE PAGE ADVANCES THE PLOT. You cannot believe it until you read it. This is a writer's book. By which I mean, and I say this with love, that if......more

Goodreads review by Ilse on May 01, 2026

Some discouragement, some faintness of heart at the new real future which replaces the imaginary, is not unusual, and we do not expect people to be deeply moved by what is not unusual. That element of tragedy which lies in the very fact of frequency, has not yet wrought itself into the coarse emotio......more

Goodreads review by Sasha on January 31, 2022

This is the best book ever written, and why would you even think that? Who cares? It seems like a particularly male thing to do, this categorizing, this ranking. When George Eliot introduces Casaubon, a compulsive categorizer who has accomplished nothing of value, it feels like more than a character......more

Goodreads review by Paul on January 16, 2021

I put off reading this for actual decades : 900 crammed pages about the well-to-do folk of an ordinary small English country town called Middlemarch. I thought it might be tweedy. Jane Austen for those who wouldn't be caught dead reading P&P. . But also I suspected it would be a masterpiece. But a v......more