Fiction
The Mayor of Casterbridge.
Thomas Hardy's tragic masterpiece explores guilt, pride, fate, and ruin in one of the great character studies of Victorian fiction.
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About this book
The Mayor of Casterbridge by Thomas Hardy is a powerful Victorian tragedy centered on Michael Henchard, a man whose impulsive act in youth shadows the rest of his life. Rising through discipline and determination to become a respected public figure, Henchard cannot escape the consequences of his past, or the flaws in temperament that repeatedly turn success into ruin.
Why The Mayor of Casterbridge endures
Hardy builds the novel around one of the strongest psychological portraits in nineteenth-century fiction. Henchard is proud, volatile, sympathetic, and self-destructive all at once. That complexity gives the story unusual emotional weight, as personal weakness and circumstance combine to produce a genuinely tragic arc.
A classic of character, fate, and social downfall
Set against the rural world of Hardy's Wessex, the novel also captures changing economic and social life in England. Readers who enjoy morally complex protagonists, dramatic reversals, and deeply human tragedy will find this novel especially compelling.
Who should read it
Recommended for readers of Hardy, George Eliot, and major Victorian fiction, The Mayor of Casterbridge remains one of the most gripping and psychologically rich classics of the period.
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