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Classic FictionLiterary FictionHistorical Fiction

Nathaniel Hawthorne

American · b. 1804

3 books reviewed Avg rating 4.2 / 5Top rating 4.4 / 5

Nathaniel Hawthorne was a 19th-century American novelist and short story writer whose psychologically intense fiction, especially The Scarlet Letter, examined sin, guilt, and Puritan repression with enduring force.

Nathaniel Hawthorne was descended from a Salem judge who presided over the witch trials of 1692, a fact that haunted both his biography and his fiction. His masterpiece, The Scarlet Letter, published in 1850, is set in seventeenth-century Puritan Boston and follows Hester Prynne, condemned to wear the letter A after bearing a child outside marriage. The novel explores her dignity in the face of communal condemnation alongside the psychological collapse of the secret father, the Reverend Dimmesdale, whose unacknowledged sin consumes him from within.

The Scarlet Letter is a moral and psychological study as much as a historical novel. Hawthorne is less interested in plot than in the inner lives of his characters — the way guilt, hypocrisy, and social judgment warp the people who carry them. The prose is dense and formal by contemporary standards, and the novel moves slowly, but its central exploration of shame versus genuine moral reckoning remains alive and relevant. Hester Prynne is one of the most fully realized characters in American literature.

Hawthorne was ambivalent about Puritanism — drawn to its moral seriousness while repelled by its cruelty — and that ambivalence gives his fiction its distinctive tension. He neither condemns religion wholesale nor romanticizes it, which makes The Scarlet Letter a more honest book than it might otherwise have been. It is not an easy read, but it is a rewarding one for readers willing to meet it on its own terms.

3 Books Reviewed

The Scarlet Letter book cover

The Scarlet Letter

by Nathaniel Hawthorne

4.4

Hester Prynne, condemned to wear the scarlet letter A for adultery in Puritan New England, lives with her illegitimate daughter Pearl while the father of her child — the revered minister Dimmesdale — declines into secret guilt.

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The House of the Seven Gables book cover

The House of the Seven Gables

by Nathaniel Hawthorne

4.1

The Pyncheon family has lived for generations under the shadow of a curse laid by a man their ancestor wrongly executed for witchcraft. Hawthorne's second novel is a Gothic meditation on inherited guilt — the way the sins of the ancestors persist in the family's blood, property, and character.

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Twice-Told Tales book cover

Twice-Told Tales

by Nathaniel Hawthorne

4.0

Hawthorne's first major collection includes 'The Minister's Black Veil,' 'Dr. Heidegger's Experiment,' 'The Gray Champion,' and 'Wakefield' — stories of Puritan guilt, scientific hubris, moral allegory, and the stranger who removes himself from human society.

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