![The Mill on the Floss (Everyman's Library Classics Series)](https://d3525k1ryd2155.cloudfront.net/f/262/417/9780679417262.RH.0.l.jpg)
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different
The Mill on the Floss (Everyman's Library Classics Series) Hardcover - 1992
by Eliot, George; Ashton, Rosemary [Introduction]
- New
- Hardcover
Description
New
NZ$134.21
NZ$9.09
Shipping to USA
Standard delivery: 2 to 21 days
More Shipping Options
Standard delivery: 2 to 21 days
Ships from GridFreed LLC (California, United States)
Details
- Title The Mill on the Floss (Everyman's Library Classics Series)
- Author Eliot, George; Ashton, Rosemary [Introduction]
- Binding Hardcover
- Edition First edition th
- Condition New
- Pages 640
- Volumes 1
- Language ENG
- Publisher Everyman's Library, New York
- Date 1992-12-15
- Features Bibliography
- Bookseller's Inventory # Q-0679417265
- ISBN 9780679417262 / 0679417265
- Weight 1.81 lbs (0.82 kg)
- Dimensions 8.22 x 5.4 x 1.67 in (20.88 x 13.72 x 4.24 cm)
- Reading level 1240
-
Themes
- Topical: Family
- Library of Congress subjects Domestic fiction, England
- Library of Congress Catalog Number 92052920
- Dewey Decimal Code FIC
About GridFreed LLC California, United States
Biblio member since 2021
We sell primarily non-fiction, many new books, some collectible first editions and signed books. We operate 100% online and have been in business since 2005.
Summary
George Eliot's novel The Mill on the Floss, orginally published in 1860 as three volumes, tells of the lives of brother and sister Tom and Maggie Tulliver as they grow up upon the River Floss.
From the rear cover
George Eliot had no peer when it came to finding the drama at the heart of normal lives, lived out in tandem with the slow, gigantic rhythms of nature itself. 'The Mill On The Floss' (1860), a story of the growth of the moral imagination in this young, sensitive heroine, Maggie Tulliver, restores to conditions of human existence that we can all recognize their actual originality and strangeness, and reveals once again how thoroughly, in the hands of a master like George Eliot, the art of fiction can satisfy our deepest mental and emotional cravings.