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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Modern Novel
"The Good Soldier" follows two well-to-do couples, John (the narrator) and Florence Dowell and Edward and Leonora Ashburnham through the course of their relationships, especially Edward's endless philandering with any woman who will submit to his relentless sexual advances. The story, told long after the events have actually transpired, details Dowell's conversion from...
Published 11 months ago by A Certain Bibliophile

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4 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Ford's most overrated novel
This is a profoundly silly book, with a cast of characters who have never and could never exist in real life. It is at best a novella that was bloated to the length of a novel by serpentine plotting and repetitive arrangement of scenes, glimpsed and glimpsed and then glimpsed again. By the middle it has become maddening to read.
Published 21 months ago by Edward A. Quigley


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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Modern Novel, February 9, 2011
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This review is from: The Good Soldier (Barnes & Noble Classics Series) (Paperback)
"The Good Soldier" follows two well-to-do couples, John (the narrator) and Florence Dowell and Edward and Leonora Ashburnham through the course of their relationships, especially Edward's endless philandering with any woman who will submit to his relentless sexual advances. The story, told long after the events have actually transpired, details Dowell's conversion from innocent onlooker in the four-way friendship into a man whose world has been turned upside down by the discovery that his wife has tried to seduce his best friend. Even then, Dowell chalks up Ashburnham's dalliances to mere "sentimentalism," a need to paternalistically place himself in a situation where he is seen as the selfless hero, as the "good soldier." While Dowell is sometimes more than fair with Ashburnham, at times he relentlessly mocks him, commenting on his stupid expressions and his petit bourgeois concern with "keeping up appearances," even in the face of a sham of a marriage. Ford seems to be looking for answers to explain such behavior, but doesn't even seem convinced by his own dubious explanations.

Marked by a radical break with the earlier, traditional Victorian novel, "The Good Soldier" is highly evocative of the society novels of Henry James, Edith Wharton, and even some D. H. Lawrence. Adultery is discussed frankly and directly, and instead of the morally certain, honest, objective narration that we see in work before it, Ford's narrator is bereft when he finds his search for meaning and simplicity an empty one, finding in its place an ambiguous and unreliable world. This is a hard pill to swallow for those who have been weaned on Dickens, Thackeray, and Trollope. Its subtlety and sensitive psychological representations mirror the complexities of people, not stock characters.

One of the most fascinating aspects of the story is how utterly conflicted Dowell remains throughout the novel. The authority of his narrative voice waxes and wanes (mostly wanes) through the entire story, which might be frustrating for some readers, but was a welcome relief for me. Concomitant with this voice is an overall ambiance of moral turpitude and decadence, and not simply as a result of Florence and Ashburnham's affair. Dowell is never slow to remind the reader that he knows little, that he might be wrong, that this was only the way things seemed to him. It is hardly a surprise that Ford, who considered himself an "impressionist," has very much up to the name and written a novel of fleeting impressions and reminiscences which always fall short of cohering into a unified story whose characters motivations are convincingly delineated.

One of the results of Ford's technique is that it breaks with one's usual response after having completed a novel: since Aristotle, we have come to find some sort of intellectual catharsis from tragedy, but this is a story that complicates that expectation, even if we are afforded some sort of edification in human moral psychology. The novel was written in 1915, no doubt a perilous time in European history. At the risk of committing an egregious post hoc ergo propter hoc, it may be that Ford's narrative is indicative of a world on the precipice of the Great War, whose social and cultural orders have shifted from firmly hierarchical to nebulous in less than a generation.

Even if you do not care for the novel itself, it would be difficult to deny its important place in a canon of works that need to be carefully and thoughtfully read to have a fuller and more appreciative knowledge of twentieth-century English literature. I cherished it, and its characters seemed like some of the most artfully drawn I've ever read. Weeks after having finished the novel, the various tęte-à-tętes and interrelationships continue to dance through my head while I imagine sitting down next to Dowell while he tells me his story.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars the "good" soldier, September 22, 2010
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Karen A McCoy (Ferndale, Michigan United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Good Soldier (Barnes & Noble Classics Series) (Paperback)
A terrific story filled with irony. I read it years ago and loved it. Then I recently read it aloud to a friend and loved it even more. Very sad but very good.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Sparse, Yet Powerful, June 5, 2011
This review is from: The Good Soldier (Barnes & Noble Classics Series) (Paperback)
This is a heartbreaking book that more often is depressing than uplifting. However, the story is intense and well told with realistic characters at an interesting point in world history.
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4 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Ford's most overrated novel, May 2, 2010
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This review is from: The Good Soldier (Barnes & Noble Classics Series) (Paperback)
This is a profoundly silly book, with a cast of characters who have never and could never exist in real life. It is at best a novella that was bloated to the length of a novel by serpentine plotting and repetitive arrangement of scenes, glimpsed and glimpsed and then glimpsed again. By the middle it has become maddening to read.
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The Good Soldier (Barnes & Noble Classics Series)
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