Editors Reads
Literary FictionClassic Literature

George Eliot

British · b. 1819

6 books reviewed Avg rating 4.3 / 5Top rating 4.8 / 5

George Eliot was the pen name of Mary Ann Evans, a Victorian novelist whose masterpiece Middlemarch is widely considered one of the greatest novels in the English language.

Mary Ann Evans published under the male pseudonym George Eliot to ensure her work was taken seriously in a literary culture that often dismissed women’s writing as merely domestic. The strategy worked: her novels were celebrated as the most intellectually serious fiction of her era, and Middlemarch, published in 1872, stands now as one of the most fully achieved novels in the English language. Virginia Woolf called it “one of the few English novels written for grown-up people” — a judgement that captures both its psychological depth and its refusal to simplify the adult experience of compromise and unfulfilled potential.

Middlemarch is a study of life in a provincial English town in the years around the Reform Bill of 1832, but its real subject is the gap between ambition and circumstance. Dorothea Brooke, the novel’s central figure, is a woman of extraordinary intellectual and moral energy with almost no legitimate outlet for it — her story, and the stories of the doctors, politicians, and landowners around her, are rendered with a compassion and intelligence that never tips into sentimentality. Eliot’s narrator is one of the most sophisticated voices in Victorian fiction: knowing, ironic, and genuinely interested in human weakness.

Middlemarch asks for patience — it is long, dense, and built on careful observation rather than melodrama — and readers in search of plot-driven excitement will find it slow. But readers willing to inhabit its world will find it inexhaustibly rich, a novel that continues to illuminate how social structures shape individual lives with uncomfortable precision.

6 Books Reviewed

Middlemarch book cover
Editor's Pick

Middlemarch

by George Eliot

4.8

A sweeping portrait of English provincial society in the 1830s, centering on the idealistic Dorothea Brooke and the ambitious Dr. Lydgate as they pursue their aspirations and confront their disappointments.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Daniel Deronda book cover

Daniel Deronda

by George Eliot

4.3

Eliot's final novel follows Gwendolen Harleth, who makes a disastrous marriage to a cruel man for financial security, and Daniel Deronda, who discovers his Jewish heritage and commits himself to the Zionist cause — a dual portrait of what English society does to intelligent women and what Jewish identity means.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
The Mill on the Floss book cover

The Mill on the Floss

by George Eliot

4.3

Maggie Tulliver grows up on the River Floss, trapped between her fierce intelligence and her society's refusal of it, between loyalty to her beloved but conventional brother Tom and her own ungovernable desires — Eliot's most autobiographical and psychologically penetrating early novel.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Adam Bede book cover

Adam Bede

by George Eliot

4.2

Eliot's first novel follows a carpenter in rural England, a young woman whose illegitimate child she kills in a moment of terror, and a Methodist preacher who bears witness to both — a profound exploration of how communities judge transgression and how love survives judgment.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Silas Marner book cover

Silas Marner

by George Eliot

4.2

A linen weaver falsely accused of theft retreats into misanthropy and the hoarding of gold — until his gold is stolen and a golden-haired foundling child appears at his hearth, drawing him slowly back into human life.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)
Romola book cover

Romola

by George Eliot

4.0

Set in fifteenth-century Florence during the life of Savonarola, Eliot's most researched novel follows Romola, daughter of a blind scholar, whose Greek husband Tito Melema is one of fiction's most precisely observed depictions of moral deterioration by small increments.

Check Price on Amazon (paid link)

Reading Guides & Lists

Disclosure: Amazon links on this page are affiliate links. If you purchase through them we earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.

Skip to main content