Poor Miss Finch

by Wilkie Collins

Other authorsCatherine Peters (Editor)
Paperback, 1995

Status

Available

Call number

823.8

Collection

Publication

Oxford University Press, USA (1995), Paperback, 480 pages

Description

Classic Literature. Fiction. HTML: What if you had been deprived of sight for your entire life�only to have your vision restored just as you found yourself falling in love for the first time? That's the seemingly miraculous fate that befalls the Miss Finch of the title in this classic novel from abidingly popular nineteenth-century author Wilkie Collins..

User reviews

LibraryThing member kotwcs
This story is a about a beautiful blind girl, Lucilla Finch, who falls in love with shy and handsome Oscar Dubourg. Before long, however, Oscar's identical twin brother comes for a visit...and is infatuated with "Poor Miss Finch". The story is told through the eyes of a "funny foreign
Show More
woman"--Madame Pratulungo, who is indeed quite delightful.
I'm used to sensational mysteries from Collins, but this book reminded me that Collins was a friend of Dickens--it's rather a social commentary. It's full of Wilkie-wit and a fantastic plot, but in it he does have a lot to say about blindness and disfigurements in people, and how they're really not so handicapped or pitiable as you'd think. An entertaining read with interesting characters.
Show Less
LibraryThing member SheReadsNovels
Having read all four of Wilkie Collins' most popular books (The Woman in White, Armadale, No Name and The Moonstone), I am now exploring his less popular novels. This one, Poor Miss Finch, was published in 1872 and unlike most of the books that preceded it, is not really a 'sensation novel',
Show More
although it does have certain sensational elements (mysterious strangers, theft, assault, letters being intercepted, mistaken identities etc). It's actually an interesting study into what it's like to be blind since infancy and the emotions a person experiences on learning that there may be a chance of regaining their sight.

This book handles the topic of blindness in a sensitive and intriguing way. It's obvious that Collins had done a lot of research into the subject and the results are fascinating. He discusses the theory that when a person is blind their other senses improve to compensate for their lack of sight and he weighs up the advantages and disadvantages there would be if this person then regained their sight. I had never even thought about some of the aspects of blindness that are mentioned in the book.

The characters, as usual, are wonderful - most of them anyway. Lucilla, the 'Poor Miss Finch' of the title, is not very likeable (she has a tendency to throw foot-stamping tantrums when she doesn't get her own way) but I loved Madame Pratolungo - she was such an amusing and engaging narrator! We also meet Reverend Finch, Lucilla's father, who chooses to recite Hamlet at the most inappropriate moments, and his wife, Mrs Finch, who is 'never completely dressed; never completely dry; always with a baby in one hand and a novel in the other'. With Lucilla's little half-sister Jicks, Collins even makes a three year old girl into an unusual and memorable character.

Although I thought parts of the plot felt contrived, the story did become very gripping towards the end. This was an interesting and thought provoking read, and if you have enjoyed any other Wilkie Collins books, then I suspect you might enjoy this one too.
Show Less
LibraryThing member bookwoman247
Lucilla Finch is a young woman who has been blind since the age of one. The complications that ensue when her sight is restored combine with the complicatons that arise from the feelings that identical twin brothers have for her.

I was immediately grabbed by the Dickensian humor I found in the first
Show More
part of the book, and which appeared from time to time throughout the book.

At other times the story became more gothic in nature, which was more in line with what I've come to expect from Collins. It never quite became truly gothic, though. I would venture to call it gothic light.

Loving Dickens and his particular brand of humor, (and pathos), as I do, and loving gothic novels as I also do, I thoroughly enjoyed Poor Miss Finch.
Show Less
LibraryThing member beabatllori
Meh.

This is a book that features a bunch of awesome characters. There's a French governess with radical Communist views, a blind girl with weirdly racist tendencies, a set of twins (one of whom has blue skin), a peculiar German oculist who won't wash and is named Grosse (tee hee hee). There's even
Show More
a five-year-old girl who runs away from home at every opportunity and stands against robbers if they laugh at her.

This is typical Wilkie Collins material - charming, interesting characters against a background of mistaken identities, recovered eyesights, dashing against-the-clock rescues, and unrequited love.

The only problem is, for the first 300 pages, NOTHING HAPPENS. (How is this even possible? There is so much great material there!). Just looots of buildup.

Then something happens.

Then nothing again, then some more buildup happens, then everything happens on the last 30 pages. Then done.

They call them sensation novels for a reason, you know?
Show Less

Language

Original publication date

1872

Physical description

480 p.; 7.3 inches

ISBN

0192823221 / 9780192823229
Page: 0.3855 seconds