Women in Love by D.H. Lawrence

I just finished “Women in Love” by D.H. Lawrence. It was written in 1920 and is set in the early 1910’s, before the first World War, and concerns the lives of two sisters, Ursula and Gudrun Brangwen who live in a small coal mining town in England. Gudren, who is an artist,  falls in love with Robert Crich, a businessman. Ursula falls in love with Robert Birkin, an intellectual. A good summary of the book is here. The book is about relationships, between men and women, and between men.

The book has a racy reputation but it is very tame by modern standards. It was banned in Britain for 11 years after its publication.

My impression of the book is that it is a torrent of words, a regular Niagara Falls. Lawrence sets up the various scenes completely including the emotional state of the parties involved and then puts the scene in motion. I thought he was great at picking out the nuances of a relationship, from deep attraction, to mild irritation and of describing how people in a group interact. He set up some scenes that seemed fairly innocuous and then suddenly something happens, a punch is thrown, a horse kicks up, somebody drowns. To do all this requires the deluge of words, words of all types. I read the book on my Kindle because it is free and that was handy because of the built in dictionary.

I enjoyed the book but it is not light reading. The information density in the prose is thick and if you don’t pay attention to it then the subsequents scenes don’t make much sense. Anyways, I’m glad that I read it and can now tick it off my life TBR list and I don’t think that I’ll be reading much more of his stuff. I am not smart enough.

4 thoughts on “Women in Love by D.H. Lawrence

  1. Sylvia K

    I’ve struggled through some of his stuff — not this one, and I came to the conclusion that I’m either not smart enough or emotional enough to get very far and I wrote him off and moved on. Glad it wasn’t just me! Hope your weekend is going well and that you have better weather than we do!

    Sylvia

  2. Leedslass

    Your critique makes me feel so much better about myself. I tried (and failed miserably) to read one of Lawrence’s books and have never bothered looking at another. Your brain is so much younger than mine that I now feel totally exonerated. Good on you for sticking it out to the end.

  3. GW Bill Miller

    Nice review. This may just remain on my life TBR list. I like though that you gave us a feel for the style of the writer without revealing much of the plot. This is a strong book, maybe too muscular for me.

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