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Book Reviews of The Scarlet Letter

The Scarlet Letter
The Scarlet Letter
Author: Nathaniel Hawthorne
ISBN-13: 9781593080129
ISBN-10: 1593080123
Publication Date: 4/1/2003
Pages: 280
Rating:
  • Currently 3.4/5 Stars.
 34

3.4 stars, based on 34 ratings
Publisher: Barnes & Noble
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

61 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 25 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 5
I never read this book in high school and frankly, I'm glad I didn't. I don't believe an un-married modern teenager could fathom what the characters in this book are experiencing. I had expected to slog through and did not expect to enjoy it, reading it only because my book club chose it. How wrong I was!

The antiquated prose style takes getting used to, but once acclimated to the cadence, one can really enjoy the juicy morsels Hawthorne dishes up. This book is not for the faint of heart! High melodrama with good guys and bad guys and the ever self-posessed Hester Prynne. Deep themes of good and evil and the nature of man. And the writing! People just don't write like this any more...people don't even think like this any more and for that I love this book.

There are passages in this book that are as vivid as if I'd seen them in a painting. There were moments when I wanted to SCREAM at Hester Prynne, so vivid and palpable was her denial of her own rights.

If you are ready to be brought back to another time and place...read this book
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 20 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
Sometimes it's tough to slog through the writing of Hawthorne. Not to mention the speech of the Pilgrims. But it's worth it.

I recently re-read this (after 40 years) and oddly enough, the book has drastically improved. As a teenager, in English class, we were scandalized by Hester's um, well, you know. But I now see a richer, more textured story fraught with many tragedies.

Hester Prynne, a single woman in a pilgrim colony, becomes pregnant. She is ostracized, forced to live apart, and is obstinant in her refusal to name the father. She must wear a big, bright red "A" whenever in public (and is ordered to sew these herself). Known to the reader, the father is the preacher.

This is also a love story. Their love, deep and abiding, is filled with gentleness as they secretly meet in the forest. The preacher, a good man, insists on admitting the truth; Hester won't let him. Her daughter is born and life goes on.

Meantime, Hawthorne subtlely points the reader in the direction of the village hypocrites, the liars, the politics, the gossip-mongoring, and the money-grubbers.

There is much more to this novel than a simple scandal. It is a classic because it resonates with its all-too-human readers. Buy it. Read it. Keep it.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 52 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
I read this book when I was in middle school, and now, twenty years later, it holds even more power. It's a delightful story that says a great deal about the fact that what you see is not always what you get...that there is always more to the story than what meets the eye. I loved this book twenty years ago, and I'm sure that in another twenty years, it will still hold the same delight and insight.
bearcub avatar reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 20 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
this book was very hard for me to read. The text felt like a different language, I loved the story and the characters where so real. but if you're going to read this be warned it took me an hour to get through ten pages. Its a slow read and at times i want to put it down but it was so worth reading.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 6 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Set in an early New England colony, a married woman has an affair with a prominent figure, she gets impregnated. The whole town finds out about this, but she will not tell who the father of her baby is and as a punishment she is condemned to wear a letter A for adultery. This is a story about the woman, her lover and the struggles that she and her lover go through
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on
Helpful Score: 1
I read this book in high school so that would have been.. 4 years ago? Oh boy. This is an excellent book, the story is set in colonial New England and revolves around 3 main characters: Hester Prynne, Reverend Arthur Dimmesdale, and Roger Chillingworth. The story takes the reader straight into the drama of the damning of Hester Prynne and her heinous act of forbidden passion, Reverend Dimmesdale's secret guilt ridden conscience, and Chillingworth's malevalent ways.

This is an excellent book and once you've read this you'll begin to notice references made to this book from tv, movies, and other medias. A must read and well worth your time.
Tribefan avatar reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 56 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I read this while in high school and I have to admit I am still not a huge Nathaniel Hawthorne fan. That doesn't mean that I can't still share his books with others when I happen to find them!

It is 1642 in the Puritan town of Boston. Hester Prynne has been found guilty of adultery and has born an illegitimate child. In lieu of being put to death, she is condemned to wear the scarlet letter A on her dress as a reminder of her shameful act.

Hester's husband had been lost at sea years earlier and was presumed dead, but now reappears in time to witness Hester's humiliation on the town scaffold. Upon discovering her deed, the vengeful husband becomes obsessed with finding the identity of the man who dishonored his wife. To do so he assumes a false name, pretends to be a physician and forces Hester keep his new identity secret. Meanwhile Hester's lover, the beloved Reverend Dimmesdale, publicly pressures her to name the child's father, while secretly praying that she will not. Hester defiantly protects his identity and reputation, even while faced with losing her daughter, Pearl.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 86 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Classic story of penance, guilt, and pride.
ministerlarry avatar reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 6 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
The Scarlet letter is a very interested story that Hawthorne seems to tight together during the 17th century New England days of the Puritans. It shows compassion between Hester and Pearl her daughter as well as Arthur Dimmesdale the minister who had an affair with Hester causing her to have a child out of wedlock which causes tension and strife between the public and Puritan law as Hester wears the scarlet letter A, by being publicly disgraced, but gains strength from the scarlet letter that she discovers true love and devotion to her daughter Pearl. The mystery of the story is finding revealed by Minister Dimmesdale to the public. This is a wonderful book that displays the creative imagination of the romantic heart.
emmaausten7 avatar reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 54 more book reviews
The symbolism struck me quite strongly while reading. Nice story.
perryfran avatar reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 1173 more book reviews
Finished reading this with my daughter as part of a school assignment. All I can say is that I'm glad I didn't have to read this in high school! The book was written in 1850, around the same time as Moby Dick (another classic I have put off reading). I guess Scarlet Letter does have a message -- be true to yourself and strive to be individualistic. And it does delve into the morals (or lack thereof)in Puritanical Society, but trudging through the tortuous journey was really a struggle for both me and my daughter. The language used in the book may well have been common language in 1850, but trying to decipher it in 2012 was a chore to say the least. Seems like Hawthorne would go on for paragraphs trying to describe a scene or say something meaningful but would usually leave us saying, "huh?" I know this is a classic but I would only recommend it slightly.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 200 more book reviews
This is a wonderful book full of judgement, love, hate, all the raw human emotions. You will thoroughly enjoy it. I did !
eadieburke avatar reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 1612 more book reviews
Book Description
Like all of Hawthorne's novels, "The Scarlet Letter" has but a slender plot and but few characters with an influence on the development of the story. Its great dramatic force depends entirely on the mental states of the actors and their relations to one another, --relations of conscience, -- relations between wronged and wrongers. Its great burden is the weight of unacknowledged sin as seen in the remorse and cowardice and suffering of the Rev. Arthur Dimmesdale. Contrasted with his concealed agony is the constant confession, conveyed by the letter, which is forced upon Hester, and has a double effect, -- a healthful one, working beneficently, and making her helpful and benevolent, tolerant and thoughtful ; and an unhealthful one, which by the great emphasis placed on her transgression, the keeping her forever under its ban and isolating her from her fellows, prepares her to break away from the long repression and lapse again into sin when she plans her flight. Roger Chillingworth is an embodiment of subtle and refined revenge. The most striking situation is perhaps "The Minister's Vigil," in chapter xii. The book, though corresponding in its tone and burden to some of the shorter stories, had a more startling and dramatic character, and a strangeness, which at once took hold of a larger public than any of those had attracted. Though imperfectly comprehended, and even misunderstood in some quarters, it was seen to have a new and unique quality; and Hawthorne's reputation became national.

My Review
This was a re-read for me as I read this when I was in high school. I think I enjoyed it even more the second time around. Although a little outdated for today's teenagers, the book is a good look at what it was like living in the 1600's and having to adhere to their moral codes. It is a deeply emotional book with lots of symbolism and does show that bad decisions do have consequences. I do highly recommend the book as it is one story that is very hard to forget.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 23 more book reviews
Timeless.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on
One of my favorite books of all time. I posted it due to the small size of the book- it fits in a pocket book and is the size of a wallet so you can read anywhere...
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 15 more book reviews
A great classic.
scrapbooklady avatar reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 472 more book reviews
"The Scarlet Letter" is written in puritan plain style and has virtually no dialogue for you to enjoy...
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 60 more book reviews
Reader's Digest edition with beautiful binding, ribbon placemarker, beautiful patterned endpapers.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 79 more book reviews
From the jacket:
The Scarlet Letter is Nathaniel Hawthornes most famous and highly praised novel. Set in the severe Puritan community of 17th century Boston, it is a deeply moving novel, rich in psychological insight and human truths. Its main character, Hester Prynne, is Hawthorne's greatest creation. Publicly disgraced and ostracized, she draws on her inner strength and certainty of spirit to emerge as the first true heroine of American fiction.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 39 more book reviews
This book was the bane of my existence in 10th grade. I read it again a few years after seeing and loving the PBS miniseries with Meg Foster and John Heard. I found that I really enjoyed it once I read it at my own leisure and skipped over that boring Custom House introduction.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 174 more book reviews
Hated every minute of it
katethegreat avatar reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 69 more book reviews
A terrific book exposing one of man's failures and how it effects those around them.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 199 more book reviews
The classic story of Hester Prynne's punishment for adultery by her Puritan judges. Set in New England of the seventeenth century.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 34 more book reviews
Personally, I thought Hawthorne's stories in "Twice Told Tales" were much better than this. The characters's suffering seemed to overt and not at all subtle.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 7 more book reviews
This is a wonderful narrative of this classic piece of literature. I would highly recommend this set to any library.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 28 more book reviews
Popular Classics Library hardcover editon of this great classic by Nathaniel Hawthorne
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 3558 more book reviews
This the 2006 Classic "The Scarlet Letter" 6 CD's 6'1/2 hours long. While young Hester Prynne is waiting in a Boston Puritan community for her husband to arrive from England. She becomes pregnant and will not tell the father's name.So she is accused of Adultery and wears a scarlet "A" on her chest.

Chilling and unsettling, Hawthorne's story is a masterwork of social commentary that is as dramatic and relevant today as when it was written.

This is a special professional recording done by Digiview to incorporate the newest sound technology. This is a beautiful book in the Author's original scarlet "A " Case.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 720 more book reviews
The summary of the book shown at the top of this page is about another book. Puritans and adultery are the topics of this book, and the primary character is a woman, not a 15 year old boy!
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 257 more book reviews
The Scarlet Letter is the story of three New England settlers at odds with the puritan society in which they live. Roger Chillingworth, an aging scholar, arrives in New England after two years' separation from his wife Hester to find her on trial for adultery. For refusing to reveal her lover's identity, she is condemned to wear a letter 'A' sewn onto her clothes. Roger resolves to discover and destroy the man who has stolen his honor.

For the next seven years the participants in this bizarre love triangle privately suffer the consequences of betrayal, cowardice, and humiliation. Slowly but surely, the need for redemption grows in each as the story hastens toward its dramatic close. The Scarlet Letter is Nathaniel Hawthorne's masterpiece.

The handsome volumes in The Collectors Library present great works of world literature in a handy hardback format. Printed on high-quality paper and bound in real cloth, each complete and unabridged volume has a specially commissioned afterword, brief biography of the author and a further-reading list. This easily accessible series offers readers the perfect opportunity to discover, or rediscover, some of the world's most endearing literary works.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 16 more book reviews
The Scarlet Letter
An ardent young woman, her cowardly lover and her aging, vengeful husband - these are the central characters in this stark drama of the conflict between passion and convetion in the harsh, Puritan world of seventeenth-century Boston. Tremendously moving, rich in psychological insight, this tragic novel of shame and redemption reveals Hawthorne's concern with the New England past and its influence on American attitudes. From his dramatic illumination of the struggles between mind and heart, dogma and self-reliance, he fashioned one of the masterpieces of fiction. "the one American literary work which comes as near to perfection as is granted a man to bring his achievements." - Arnold Bennett
With a Foreword by Leo Marx
Published by the New American Library
A signet classic
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 35 more book reviews
A must-read for those interested in New England of the past.
havan avatar reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 138 more book reviews
I recently listened to this as an unabridged audio book hoping that that would make this classic easier to stomache. It Didn't.

This author's prose is so complex and convoluted that having to listen to it means REALLY having to listen. I'm now convinced that the print version would have been more appropriate. Not only is it easier in print to mark one's place and set the work aside but it would be satisfying to throw this tome against the wall a time or two.

The story has some redeeming aspects (it's probably one of America's earliest psychological thrillers) but the language is so dated (Thitherto?) that it's a chore to get through this and the poor reader of this audio version did an OK job but would ocassionally lose the meaning of the sub sub sub clauses.

Any high school or middle school English teacher that still assigns this as required should be brought up on charges of crimes against humanity. It would drive any reluctant reader to not only swear off reading altogether but might drive some to the Oedipal lengths of gouging one's eyes out with broaches.

As I listened to this and gazed at one of the Harry Potter novels on my shelf it occured to me... Why give Harry Potter a blood letting quill... just have him transcribe this swill!"

Though the setting is antique this was released only one year before Moby Dick and yet it reads as awkwardly as if it were written a century or two before.

I've heard it said that one of the main reasons that Franklin Pierce got elected President was that he was good buddies with Hawthorne and Hawthorne actually wrote his biography. If was anything like the prose here, one wonders "how could that have helped?"

Finally Hawthorne provides the best words to critique his work when he describes the book that sent poor Dimsdale to dreamland in one of the books crucial scenes... "A Work of vast ability in the somniferous school of literature."

Pretty much wrote his own review there...
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 4 more book reviews
Very nice read, in high school
soquiet avatar reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 20 more book reviews
Novel by Nathaniel Hawthorne, published in 1850. It is considered a masterpiece of American literature and a classic moral study. The novel is set in a village in Puritan New England. The main character is Hester Prynne, a young woman who has borne an illegitimate child. Hester believes herself a widow, but her husband, Roger Chillingworth, returns to New England very much alive and conceals his identity. He finds his wife forced to wear the scarlet letter A on her dress as punishment for her adultery. Chillingworth becomes obsessed with finding the identity of his wife's former lover. When he learns that the father of Hester's child is Arthur Dimmesdale, a saintly young minister who is the leader of those exhorting her to name the child's father, Chillingworth proceeds to torment the guilt-stricken young man. In the end Chillingworth is morally degraded by his monomaniacal pursuit of revenge; Dimmesdale is broken by his own sense of guilt, and he publicly confesses his adultery before dying in Hester's arms. Only Hester can face the future bravely, as she plans to take her daughter Pearl to Europe to begin a new life.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 28 more book reviews
Might be on your college or high school reading list! It was on mine, so I was "forced" to read it, but enjoyed it none-the-less.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 188 more book reviews
Classic American fiction based in 17th century Puritan community in New England. This edition has a foreward by Leo Marx, signet classic binding. First read this in high school, very crisp and readable compared to other "classics", language is fairly modern. Try this again if you haven't read it recently!
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 7 more book reviews
Published by Dell Paperbacks, 1950.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on
A wonderful classic by Nathaniel Hawthorne! Great for students.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 9 more book reviews
A classic.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 55 more book reviews
A classic.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 4 more book reviews
I read this in high school. It is a great character and color meaning study.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 7 more book reviews
Well written account of life at the time, although occasionally long-winded. Good character development.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 40 more book reviews
It's been ages since I read this, but it's definitely a classic. This story is a wonderful view into a time when, much like today, religion was a fierce weapon. Nathaniel Hawthorne was clearly a master of not only storytelling, but the basic human psychology, and this tale is among his finest.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 81 more book reviews
This was a great book, a little drama and a bit scarry. The birth of Pearl is what makes this the great book that it is. The end was also a little surprising-and ironic.
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An Amazon.com review:
The story itself deals with sin and adultery, a subject that isn't very popular right now. Hawthorne does an excellent job of telling us about this, but he leaves the reader with many questions floating around in his mind at the conclusion. At the end of the story you're not 100% sure if Hawthorne was condemning the Puritan society, or if he was commending it. He leaves that for the reader to figure out, which is a thing authors seldom do. That's a major reason I believe this work is so unique and timeless.

The story involves a women named Hester Prynne, living in the New World in the late 17th century. She has committed adultery with someone unknown, and, since the Puritan society considered the Bible to be their ultimate source of law, the punishment was quite severe for such an act. Hester is forced to wear a scarlet "A" (for adultery) on her attire at all times, as a sign to everyone that she has sinned deeply. And so she must carry out the rest of her life this way. That's the major gist of the plot, although there's much more. I won't give it anyway, though, you'll have to read the book to find out.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 3 more book reviews
I had to read this for English II. It was a decent book. It was dense and took a while to read and comprehend, but overall, it was good. I enjoyed it, although I think further discussion of the themes and indepth analyzation would have helped me to further appreciate this American classic.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 47 more book reviews
A classic... deals with relationship issues, adultery, and who is to blame.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 2 more book reviews
Excellent condition, A classic
havan avatar reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 138 more book reviews
I'd never read this classic and ordered the unabridged audio book in hopes that this would make it less painful to fill one of the holes in my classical education.

It Didn't.

This author's prose is so complex and convoluted that having to listen to it means REALLY having to listen. I'm now convinced that the print version would have been more appropriate. Not only is it easier in print to mark one's place and set the work aside but it would be satisfying to throw this tome against the wall a time or two.

The story has some redeeming aspects (it's probably one of America's earliest psychological thrillers) but the language is so dated (Thitherto?) that it's a chore to get through this and the poor reader of this audio version does an OK job but does ocassionally lose the meaning of the sub sub sub clauses.

Any high school or middle school English teacher that still assigns this as required should be brought up on charges of crimes against humanity. It would drive any reluctant reader to not only swear off reading altogether but might drive some to the Oedipal lengths of gouging one's eyes out with broaches.

As I listened to this and gazed at one of the Harry Potter novels on my shelf it occured to me... Why give Harry Potter a blood letting quill... just have him transcribe this swill!"

And a further trial in the audio version... all the world knows the heroine herein as Hester Prynne (rhymes with SIN.) However, the reader of this audiobook version insists on calling her Hester Prynne (rhymes with FINE.)

Though the setting is antique this was released only one year before Moby Dick and yet it reads as awkwardly as if it were written a century before.

I've heard it said that one of the main reasons that Franklin Pierce got elected President was that he was good buddies with Hawthorne and Hawthorne actually wrote his biography. If was anything like the prose here, one wonders "how could that have helped?"

Finally Hawthorne provides the best words to critique his work when he describes the book that sent poor Dimsdale to dreamland in one of the books crucial scenes... "A Work of vast ability in the somniferous school of literature."

Pretty much wrote his own review there...
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 9 more book reviews
What an interesting look into Puritan life. I love the themes in the book, good and evil, dark and light...
missgwhiz avatar reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 186 more book reviews
i really liked this read.very interesting.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 25 more book reviews
A classic American novel.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 16 more book reviews
This book is about a dark tale of love,crime, and revenge. This is a good story, paobably most of the world has already read it. For those who did not try reading it you might like it.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 30 more book reviews
Scandal in a small town, can be read like a trashy novel or at a deeper level with loads of symbolism.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 18 more book reviews
A Classic
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Required reading for most high schools.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 56 more book reviews
Has to be read, so might as well read it.
reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 48 more book reviews
This was even better an I expected it to be. I read it over a year ago, and it was not disappointing. I felt as if I understood this novel as if it were close to home.
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I loathe this book.
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To be honest...I have never read this book, but it is a classic.
JamieLynn avatar reviewed The Scarlet Letter on + 81 more book reviews
Withdrawn from Library Collection