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8 Reviews
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36 of 37 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Wilkie Collins in good form..
In general, I have not been impressed with the works of Wilkie Collins outside his "big 4" novels ('The Woman in White', 'No Name', 'Armadale', and 'The Moonstone'). 'Man and Wife' was written right after 'The Moonstone', the last of his really successful novels. Sadly, this novel is unjustly overlooked by Wilkie Collins fans. It's actually a fun read.

'Man...

Published on March 19, 2001 by lazza

versus
3.0 out of 5 stars ~engaging and sweet~
I love reading about family lives, about relationships and about what people are going through. I found all of these in a rather slow and naive (it's a Victorian times book, after all!) yet engaging and sweet "Man and Wife" volume. It's full of author's morals, it's written in a very simple language and yet there is something very profound and classy in between it's...
Published 9 days ago by Victoria


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36 of 37 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Wilkie Collins in good form.., March 19, 2001
By 
lazza (Fort Lauderdale, Florida) - See all my reviews
In general, I have not been impressed with the works of Wilkie Collins outside his "big 4" novels ('The Woman in White', 'No Name', 'Armadale', and 'The Moonstone'). 'Man and Wife' was written right after 'The Moonstone', the last of his really successful novels. Sadly, this novel is unjustly overlooked by Wilkie Collins fans. It's actually a fun read.

'Man and Wife' is a complicated story about a young couple, and their friends/family, caught up in the consequences of lax marriage laws during the Victorian era. At that time folks in Scotland were considered married if they simply announced it. No need for marriage licenses, blood tests, etc. Wilkie Collins's gift of building the suspense works well, and the book's ending is unexpected (and terrific).

'Man and Wife' is every bit as good as, say, 'The Moonstone'. However for Wilkie Collins neophytes I suggest first trying 'The Woman in White' or 'No Name' (..both are my favorites).

PS - I think the previous reviewer is mistaken. This book has nothing to do with intrusive mother-in-laws.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A harsh view of Victorian marriages, April 15, 2010
By 
Elizabeth (San Antonio, Texas) - See all my reviews
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Man and Wife is a novel of two generations of marriages that end in disaster. However, the novel is much more than the story of a helpless Victorian bride at the mercy of her despotic husband. Instead, Man and Wife explores the complex laws surrounding Irish and Scottish marriages in the nineteenth century. Wilkie Collins's interest in the law, especially marriage and divorce, lead to a novel with endless legal loopholes concerning what constitututes a marriage and what doesn't.

The lives of two generation of friends named Anne and Blanche are forever changed by the laws concerning man and wife. The first generation Anne and Blanche are childhood friends. Anne Vanborough's Irish marriage is declared null and void by English law. She dies broken hearted and entreats her dearest friend, Anne, to look after he daughter also named Anne. As Anne lay dying she thinks of her daughter and wonders "will she end like me?".

After Anne's death, Blanche raises little Anne as her own. Little Anne and Blanche's daughter also named Blanche become best friends. However, history is determined to repeat itself in a much more tragic manner.

Another marriage comes under scrutiny. Another woman is forced to become an outcast by the legal system. Anne and Blanche are destined to relive the events that cursed their mothers. I absolutely recommend this novel to all WC fans. Many parts of the novel will move you to tears, others will leave you livid. In my opinion, Man and Wife features the most despicable character I've ever encountered in a Collins novel. An excellent read!
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars One of Collins' Best, September 22, 2009
By 
disco75 "disco75" (State College, PA United States) - See all my reviews
*Man & Wife* is a wonderful mystery novel, except that instead of the whodunit format, the time frame is reversed and the crime is unfolding as we read. With exciting prose and plotting, Collins produces in the second quarter of the book a pursuit sequence almost as riveting as *Dracula's* 1897 mountain chase. The misdeed is largely psychological and societal: a woman promised but not given marriage becomes pregnant, and she has to be very resourceful in identifying a way to keep her baby legitimate as she hides her condition under the bustles of Victorian dress codes. So far, shades of Hardy's *Two On A Tower,* except this is not a romance. Rather, it is an excoriation of Victorian male-female privilege disparities using bizarre, and actual, Scottish marriage laws of the time.

It was written after Collins' blockbuster 1860s novels. As a result, it has the more finely nuanced understanding of human nature that he honed until his very finest novel (*The Evil Genius* comedy). However, it was composed in 1870, and the proximity to his very purple sensation novels like *Armadale* and *Woman In White* leave *Man & Wife* turning in the last quarter to a jep novel that is a sensation style but not as campily over-the-top as the 60s volumes. Fortunately, there is finely-observed satire and comedy to lighten the mood most of the way. It is stronger than that other hidden gem of Collins, *Hide & Seek* and more believable than *The Moonstone.* So cinematic, I'm surprised it hasn't been made into a Gosford Park-style treat.
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3.0 out of 5 stars ~engaging and sweet~, February 15, 2012
By 
Victoria "RangerGirl" (Provo, UT, United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Man and Wife (Kindle Edition)
I love reading about family lives, about relationships and about what people are going through. I found all of these in a rather slow and naive (it's a Victorian times book, after all!) yet engaging and sweet "Man and Wife" volume. It's full of author's morals, it's written in a very simple language and yet there is something very profound and classy in between it's pages. Watch out whom you trust to; keep your formal affairs in order and stay noble - you'll be rewarded: these are, in short, the main messages of the book as I saw them. A great read for a bad-weather afternoon, especially if you throw in a cozy blankie, a cup of hot chocolate and a tray of cookies!

Victoria Evangelina
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5.0 out of 5 stars wilkie1, January 16, 2012
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This review is from: Man and Wife (Kindle Edition)
another great book by David Wilkie who is so unjustly fallen into a relative obscurity; great reading, romantism, social criticism, a bit of suspens...
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5.0 out of 5 stars Great read, April 23, 2010
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This review is from: Man and Wife (Kindle Edition)
This was the first book by Wilkie Collins that I read and I thoroughly enjoyed it. I have now purchased all of his other books!
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book!, February 21, 2010
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Martha Grenon (Austin, TX United States) - See all my reviews
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This is a great book about the powerlessness of women in Great Britain, circa 1850, and how young Anne Silvester was finally able to overcome a looming hideous fate and triumph in the end. Equally as thrilling as "The Woman in White."
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10 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Agony of Divorce, February 18, 2000
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This was actually a fun read. It's an anti-mother-in-law book. It's also about divorce. Despite the Victorian horror of the subject, I can't help thinking that we modern folk could learn something from this book. Little things mostly, like avoiding temptation and not placing your spouse in temptation. Probably the biggest thing I learned was not to have your mother-in-law live with you. Good advice in any age.
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Man and Wife (Dodo Press)
Man and Wife (Dodo Press) by Wilkie Collins (Paperback - November 30, 2007)
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