Product Details
Caleb Williams: or, Things as They are (Penguin Classics)

Caleb Williams: or, Things as They are (Penguin Classics)
By William Godwin

List Price: £8.99
Price: £5.98 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery. Details

Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk

26 new or used available from £4.17

Average customer review:

Product Description

When honest young Caleb Williams comes to work as a secretary for Squire Falkland, he soon begins to suspect that his new master is hiding a terrible secret. But as he digs deeper into Falkland’s past and finally unearths the guilty truth, the results of his curiosity prove calamitous when – even though Caleb has loyally sworn never to disclose what he has discovered – the Squire enacts a cruel revenge. A tale of gripping suspense and psychological power, William Godwin’s novel creates a searing depiction of the intolerable persecution meted out to a good man in pursuit of justice and equality. Written to expose the political oppression and corrupt hierarchies its author saw in the world around him, Caleb Williams (1794) makes a radical call to end the tyrannical misuses of power.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #115588 in Books
  • Published on: 2005-02-24
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 448 pages

Editorial Reviews

About the Author
William Godwin was an important figure in the transition from Enlightenment thinking to Romanticism during the early nineteenth century. A radical philosopher, novelist, historian, and progressive educationalist, he was in East Anglia in 1756 and trained for five years for the Dissenting ministry at Hoxton Academy, before abandoning a career as a minister to become a writer. The lover of Mary Wollstonecraft, his followers included Wordsworth, Coleridge and Shelley, and Charles Dickens, Edgar Allan Poe and Nathaniel Hawthorne were all influenced by his work. He died in London in 1836. Maurice Hindle divides his time between freelance writing and teaching for the Open University. He has also edited Frankenstein for the Penguin Classics.


Customer Reviews

Good Stuff4
I first read this novel 14 years ago for educational purposes and absolutely loved it.
Upon rereading the novel I discovered that the intervening years, or perhaps more pertinently, my changed circumstances and world view have somewhat lessened my enjoyment.
I hasten to add my circumstances have not changed so much that I am now Falkland incarnate, but the unremitting misery heaped on Caleb does begin to grate after a while, or rather the constant bemoaning of the social order and those in authority's misuse of its associated power does. Maybe I've just been hardened by life, I don't know!
The other problem I had was the ending which was out of kilter with the previous 200 pages. To say the ending is implausible would be the understatement of the year.
Nonetheless, this is an entertaining read containing elements of the gothic, detective and adventure novel along with its unrelenting social and political message.