Silas Marner and Two Short Stories, by George Eliot, is part of the Barnes & Noble Classics series, which offers quality editions at affordable prices to the student and the general reader, including new scholarship, thoughtful design, and pages of carefully crafted extras. Here are some of the remarkable features of Barnes & Noble Classics:
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George Eliots third novel, Silas Marner (1861) is a powerful and moving tale about one mans journey from exile and loneliness to the warmth and joy of the family.
The story opens as Silas Marner, falsely accused of theft, loses everything, including his faith in God. Embittered and alienated from his fellow man, he moves to the village of Raveloe, where he becomes a weaver. Taking refuge in his work, Silas slowly begins to accumulate goldhis only joy in lifeuntil one day that too is stolen from him. Then one dark evening, a beautiful, golden-haired child, lost and seeing the light from Silass cottage, toddles in through his doorway. As Silas grows to love the girl as if she were his own daughter, his life changes into something precious. But his happiness is threatened when the orphans real father comes to claim the girl as his own, and Silas must face losing a treasure greater than all the gold in the world.
This volume also includes two shorter works by EliotThe Lifted Veil, a dark Gothic fantasy about a morbid young clairvoyant, and Brother Jacob, a deliciously satirical fable about a confectioners apprentice.
George Levine is Kenneth Burke Professor of English Literature at Rutgers University, and director of the Universitys Center for the Critical Analysis of Contemporary Culture. He has written extensively about Victorian literature and culture, and has for a long time focused attention on Darwin and the relations between science and literature, particularly in his Darwin and the Novelists. He has written and edited many books, on subjects ranging from Frankenstein to the works of Thomas Pynchon. Most recently, he has edited The Cambridge Companion to George Eliot and written a study of Victorian scientific thought and literature, Dying to Know.