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Howards End (Dover Thrift Editions: Classic Novels) Paperback – 29 Oct. 2002

4.1 out of 5 stars 4,383 ratings

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The self-interested disregard of a dying woman's bequest, an impulsive girl's attempt to help an impoverished clerk, and the marriage between an idealist and a materialist -- all intersect at a Hertfordshire estate called Howards End. The fate of this beloved country home symbolizes the future of England itself in E. M. Forster's exploration of social, economic, and philosophical trends, as exemplified by three families: the Schlegels, symbolizing the idealistic and intellectual aspect of the upper classes; the Wilcoxes, representing upper-class pragmatism and materialism; and the Basts, embodying the aspirations of the lower classes. Published in 1910, Howards End won international acclaim for its insightful portrait of English life during the post-Victorian era.

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Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Dover Publications
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ 29 Oct. 2002
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 256 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0486424545
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0486424545
  • Item weight ‏ : ‎ 181 g
  • Reading age ‏ : ‎ 14 years and up
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 12.7 x 1.78 x 20.07 cm
  • Lexile measure ‏ : ‎ 820L
  • Best Sellers Rank: 325 in Fiction Classics (Books)
  • Customer reviews:
    4.1 out of 5 stars 4,383 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.1 out of 5 stars
4,383 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find "Howards End" to be a classic with beautiful prose and excellent character development. The book provides worthwhile glimpses into Britain before the world wars, with one customer noting its prescient portrayal of women's place in society. The narrative receives mixed reactions, with some finding it insightful while others find it difficult to follow. Customers disagree on the book's length, with some finding it boring.

89 customers mention ‘Readability’81 positive8 negative

Customers find the book highly readable and enjoyable, describing it as a classic with a good story.

"...feat - how she achieved this, through giving herself to both, was very interesting...." Read more

"A brilliant book full of human insight regarding cultural and class differences and the interactions between them...." Read more

"Would be a great story. Unfortunately, this particular edition is completely unreadable without a magnifying glass...." Read more

"The book is fine. There is nothing wrong with it, and I recommend the story. However this penguin paperback version I would say is poor quality!..." Read more

41 customers mention ‘Writing quality’32 positive9 negative

Customers praise the writing quality of the book, noting its beautiful prose and expressive English that makes it compelling reading. One customer mentions that it finishes with a hundred pages of sheer brilliance.

"...The only positive is the it is well written." Read more

"A wonderful text but this is a bizarrely awful edition, squeezing the entire book into 132 huge pages of tiny type - don't buy this get a proper..." Read more

"...I liked Forster’s writing style. The book isn’t particularly long but covers a lot of ground with some time jumps at parts...." Read more

"...The story is captivating but the musings of the narrator are often annoying and frequently incomprehensible...." Read more

15 customers mention ‘Character development’12 positive3 negative

Customers praise the character development in the book, with one customer noting the strong female presence and another highlighting the sense of real connection between the characters.

"Very enjoyable. Excellent characterisation. Astonishing to be reminded how much society has changed in the last 100 years or so." Read more

"...with some unexpectedly humorous moments and a sense of real connection between the characters in the form of conversations to which one can relate...." Read more

"...woman, considering when the book was set, and is such an independent character...." Read more

"...of class in England in the early 1900s is good but none of the characters are very sympathetic...." Read more

6 customers mention ‘Gender’6 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's portrayal of gender roles, with one customer noting its prescient view of women's place in society, while another highlights its detailed exploration of cultural and class differences.

"...I love Margaret Schlegel. She’s a very modern woman, considering when the book was set, and is such an independent character...." Read more

"I enjoyed the book and the depictions of social conventions, much different from our own...." Read more

"...It is also prescient about the place of women in society and the changes brought about by town planners and the increasing use of cars...." Read more

"...The book includes more of the fine points of class distinction and the deeper life of the characters than the films, of course, and it has been..." Read more

5 customers mention ‘Perspective’5 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the book's historical perspective, providing worthwhile glimpses into Britain before the world wars, with one customer noting how relevant it remains more than a century after its publication.

"...humour and the foresight make this book still interesting more than a century after it was written...." Read more

"...baffling to a modern reader, but still give worthwhile glimpses into Britain before the world wars." Read more

"...A tale from a byegone time that's as entertaining and as relevant as ever." Read more

"Interesting picture of the era but the author’s views feature too prominently at times. Descriptions of settings are well written" Read more

18 customers mention ‘Narrative quality’11 positive7 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the narrative quality of the book, with some finding it insightful while others note issues such as the plot jumping around, a thin storyline, and implausible coincidences.

"...and the impossibility for anyone to rise socially without money is engaging if at times a bit ponderous...." Read more

"...Nevertheless the story had a rather wooly beginning, had only a vague sense of heading or developing to a conclusion, which might put off some..." Read more

"...This is an engaging family drama, with some profound insights which repay rereading...." Read more

"...reading it again and got more out of it, bring that much older and wiser!" Read more

8 customers mention ‘Length’3 positive5 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the book's length, with several finding it boring.

"Boring, boring, boring!" Read more

"...I liked Forster’s writing style. The book isn’t particularly long but covers a lot of ground with some time jumps at parts...." Read more

"...Nothing seems to happen and is very repetitive. The only positive is the it is well written." Read more

"...the irony sustained almost throughout Howard's End that was difficult to keep in mind and to stomach...." Read more

7 customers mention ‘Difficulty to follow’0 positive7 negative

Customers find the book difficult to follow, describing it as tedious and frequently incomprehensible.

"...but the musings of the narrator are often annoying and frequently incomprehensible...." Read more

"...In places it is very difficult to follow and until 2/3 the way through the book I really couldn't care enough to try and decypher it...." Read more

"...to the film to be sure that I understood what it was about.. Film was stupidly simple compared to the book and lost the psychology and philosophy..." Read more

"Quite hard going, but worth it." Read more

Not a review of the book itself…more a comment about Amazon packaging
1 out of 5 stars
Not a review of the book itself…more a comment about Amazon packaging
Please could Amazon UK reconsider how they package books? As you can see from the photo this is a brand new book which has already been ruined as it was not packed tightly enough. This is the second time this has happened with a Penguin Classic. If this had not been ruined my review would be 5/5 as I absolutely love Forster
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Top reviews from United Kingdom

  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 29 October 2023
    In what was to prove the end of an idyllic period for the leisured English middle classes just before the outbreak of World War One, E. M. Forster captures the tensions and lack of “meeting of minds” between two middle class families with very different roots and attitudes: the Schlegels and the Wilcoxes. The intellectual Schlegels get away with appearing a bit unorthodox since they are half-German, that is “foreigners”. They are idealistic within their cocoon of privilege, living comfortably on inherited money. The much wealthier, pragmatic, materialistic Wilcoxes have built a fortune “in trade” and have no compunction about “keeping the workers in their place”. As Henry Wilcox observes,
    “You do admit that, if wealth was divided up equally, in a few years…the hard-working man would come to the top, the wastrel sink to the bottom”.

    Through a fateful meeting of the Schlegel siblings with the bookish, music-loving clerk Leonard Bast, Forster portrays the rigid class divide of the early 1900s. Too poor even to afford a decent umbrella, too decent to abandon the ageing, former prostitute lover who has latched on to him, unable to regain a foothold on the ladder of respectability when he loses his job through no fault of his own, it proves too hard for him to win acceptance and pursue his interests.

    Howards End seems an unlikely place for the Wilcoxes to live, being a somewhat unfashionable place in the depths of the countryside, based on Forster’s own childhood home, “Rooks Nest House”. It turns out that this belongs to Mrs Wilcox, a rather unsatisfactorily vague, two-dimensional character, dismissed as “uninteresting” by Margaret Schlegel’s chatterati friends. She exerts a calming influence on her family, but is not the woman one would expect Mr. Wilcox to have chosen for a wife. It seems that she is the “guardian” of a house which is the almost mystical symbol of an idealised way of English life that is fast disappearing at the turn of the C19 century. Knowing that she is terminally ill, she appears to hold, but never clearly expresses, the belief that Margaret Schlegel is more suited to own the house than the soulless, capitalist family into which Mrs Wilcox has married. The implications of her decision form an important part of the plot.

    It may be surprising that, when widowed, the patriarch Mr. Wilcox falls for Margaret, the plain, serious-minded elder sister who has devoted herself to her orphaned siblings to the point of risking becoming an old maid. It is understandable that she seeks “a real man” in the form of Mr Wilcox, even though the two are clearly fundamentally different in their attitude to life.

    The main characters, at least on the “middle class” side, are well developed. Margaret’s younger sister Helen, impetuous with a hint of instability, plays the role of the character prepared to challenge the system, but ill-equipped to cope unaided when “it comes to the crunch”. Brother Tibby provides a further contrast as the hypochondriac, wimpish bookworm cosseted by his sisters, who do not seem to resent the fact that, being the male child, he is the one to go Oxford.

    Written at the end of a prolonged period of social stability and convention, but foreshadowing some dramatic changes, this stands out as one of the first “modern” novels, quite radical and original in certain respects. The story proceeds with some unexpectedly humorous moments and a sense of real connection between the characters in the form of conversations to which one can relate. Forster focuses on the relevant scenes, confidently omitting any superfluous “linking” chapters. Perhaps he can be forgiven for drifting occasionally into overblown Victorian-style philosophising.

    This is an engaging family drama, with some profound insights which repay rereading. It can be read at two levels: either an Edwardian soap opera, or a quite complex amalgam of Forster’s deep reflections on the nature and future of English society, the differences between people and the ultimate need for tolerance. Although the characters may be a little wiser at the end, the wry truth remains that in any crisis the poor and the underdogs will tend to be the ones who lose out, but hints of the approaching war suggest that the escapist paradise of Howard’s End may not last.
    7 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 9 May 2019
    “Howards End” tells of the intertwining lives of three families, the Schlegels, the Wilcoxes and the Basts at the beginning of the twentieth century.

    I read this after having watched the TV adaptation with Hayley Atwell last year. I enjoyed the TV version and was keen to read the book too.

    I liked Forster’s writing style. The book isn’t particularly long but covers a lot of ground with some time jumps at parts. It was easy to follow and the writing kept me constantly hooked in and wanting more.

    I love Margaret Schlegel. She’s a very modern woman, considering when the book was set, and is such an independent character. Helen was a bit flighty for my liking and needed to think things through a bit more but this obviously worked for the storyline. Their brother, Tibby, felt a bit pointless, he didn’t really seem to serve much purpose in the story and wasn’t very well fleshed out.

    It’s easy to see the hypocrisy in the different reactions to Henry Wilcox’s behaviour and Helen’s. Even when Margaret pointed out to Henry the similarities between Helen’s situation and his past behaviour he couldn’t see it. Women were very much treated as being beneath men and Margaret was scorned for her independence and some of her interests.

    Charles Wilcox is very typical of wealthy young men in England at that time. Desperate to protect what he sees as “his” though he has little more claim on it than anyone else and treats his wife like a simpleton; just there to look nice and raise the children. I really wanted Dolly to grow a pair and shout at him!

    I would have liked to know more about the Basts. I felt that their story was the weaker of the three and they mainly existed as plot points.

    I’d definitely read this again and would recommend it to anyone with an interest in period tales with a strong female character.
    5 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 7 July 2016
    It is the first time I've written a review on Amazon but I felt I must as I just loved this book. My first E. M. Forster was 'Passage to India' which we read for 'A' Level a long time ago; there, I loved the background but found the 'mystery' at the centre of the novel irritating, even at second and third reading. Then, 'A Room with a View' didn't connect with my life or times. However, I chose 'Howard's End' this year as a holiday read and couldn't put it down. It dealt with an issue that I've grappled with all my life ... how to marry the spiritual and practical sides of life. The book kept me going right to the last chapter - Helen representing the spiritual, Henry representing the practical - with the person of Margaret as both battleground and saviour. That she united the two and brought peace to the household was quite a feat - how she achieved this, through giving herself to both, was very interesting. I thought a lot about the biblical figures of Martha (practical) and Mary (spiritual), as I read it. This book is timeless, it's thoughts will stay with me, and I will read it again some day. A 'must' for anyone who enjoys a philosophical read.
    6 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 26 June 2015
    I hadn't read the book since I was a teenager (a long time ago) but have seen the film more recently. So I couldn't help seeing Emma Thompson and co as I read - not sure this helped. The story is captivating but the musings of the narrator are often annoying and frequently incomprehensible. In spite of a dated feel to the style, there are threads in the plot which chime with more modern concerns - attitudes to women and the inequality of the English class system, for example. We're going to discuss it at a book group next week. I foresee some disagreement!
    2 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • Heidi Woodhead
    5.0 out of 5 stars Perfection
    Reviewed in Australia on 10 April 2018
    I enjoyed this book immensely. Such prose and poetry. It explores the differences not only between class and gender but also between different types of people; the cultural and spiritual opposed to the pragmatic and business-like and how their lives and beliefs intersect.
  • Jayesh
    5.0 out of 5 stars One of the Greatest Books of Edwardian Era
    Reviewed in India on 17 June 2025
    Found it in perfect condition
  • Aran Joseph Canes
    5.0 out of 5 stars A Shift in the Collective Moral Perspective
    Reviewed in the United States on 27 October 2022
    E.M. Forster’s novels epitomize the values of the Bloomsbury set to which he belonged. Howard’s End wittingly satires the highly class conscious world of Edwardian England. A Room With a View portrays the vapidity of the arranged marriages of his day and makes a convincing case for matrimony based only on romantic love.

    Influenced by the Cambridge philosopher G.E. Moore, who thought that the good could only be intuited instead of reasoned to, the Bloomsbury authors helped accomplish a revolution in morals which is ongoing. Instead of stemming from an ancient text, or derived from reflection on the correct behavior for the rational animal, Forster pens an articulate appeal for sensitivity to the needs of every person, the goodness of the human body and a strong aversion to moral judgment.

    Thus, the Wilcoxes of Howard’s End orate proudly on the just desserts of their labor but blithely ignore their dying matriarch’s request to bequeath her house to someone outside the family. Mr. Wilcox is forgiven for an affair conducted with an orphaned teen, but refuses to house his sister-in-law who is pregnant out of wedlock. Throughout, upper class suitors are generally shown to be stuffy, self-obsessed and unfeeling towards the women they desire.

    But it is no longer the early 20th century and we can now see the results of the experiment in Bloomsbury ethics. We’ve supposedly ended loveless marriages but instead have children growing up without the stable family structure they so strongly desire. The classes are thankfully less like a caste structure, but we’ve found other affiliations, like political party, on which to divide our communities. And while the body is certainly a good, it doesn’t take the recognition that many body images have to be photoshopped to realize that something is out of sorts with our obsession around the body.

    I don’t feel a need to impose my philosophy on anyone, but I do think that we can use reason to establish virtues, norms and guides that transcend cultures and go beyond the simple ethic of good-heartedness and no personal judgment. But if you want to trace this source of modern mores, E.M. Forster’s early 20th century novels are perhaps the best place to start. Not only enjoyable, they subtly set about revolutionizing the world and thus they’re essential just for understanding ourselves. Highly recommended.
  • Otto
    5.0 out of 5 stars Un ritratto delle classi della società inglese dell'inizio del Novecento
    Reviewed in Italy on 13 July 2020
    Non avevo mai acquistato queste edizioni, ma devo dire che sono rimasta soddisfatta!
    La copertina è plastificata e le pagine sono di buona qualità anche se non ho apprezzato molto la presenza della linea che separa il titolo del libro dal corpo del testo, ma è un gusto estetico personale. La storia è molto bella, perché racconta dell'incontro tra classi differenti con le loro divergenze e battaglie personali. Consigliatissimo!
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    Otto
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Un ritratto delle classi della società inglese dell'inizio del Novecento

    Reviewed in Italy on 13 July 2020
    Non avevo mai acquistato queste edizioni, ma devo dire che sono rimasta soddisfatta!
    La copertina è plastificata e le pagine sono di buona qualità anche se non ho apprezzato molto la presenza della linea che separa il titolo del libro dal corpo del testo, ma è un gusto estetico personale. La storia è molto bella, perché racconta dell'incontro tra classi differenti con le loro divergenze e battaglie personali. Consigliatissimo!
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  • StephM
    5.0 out of 5 stars The way to live
    Reviewed in Germany on 24 May 2010
    There is an implicit recurrent question in all (good) literature: What is a life and how should it be lived? It is the eternal human question after what constitutes the good life. In a novel, the question may appear more or less explicitly, it may be asked in greater or lesser generality, the plot may try to give an answer or try to avoid doing so. Forster's novel 'Howards End' poses the question rather explicitly and approaches it from many perspectives. The novel is driven by the conflict between two diverging views on the good life: One is based on the assumption that life is more than its material content. In this life poetry and music count for much, intellectual pursuits are valued higher than worldly success, and the various threads of reality connect in a significant way. This inner life, however, fails to connect with the kind of life that supports the material basis of society. This view on life is held by the Mrs. Schlegels, Margaret and Helen, whose lives are determined by literature, music, and intellectual discussion.

    The other view on life is personified in Mr Henry Wilcox, who is a successful business man with a keen insight into the workings of the market but whose intelligence stops short of understanding anything beyond the world of figures. His life is the life of 'telegrams and anger' where decisions are taken and risks run. In this world the strongest survive and there is no pity for those who go under. This side of life, the struggle of those at the brink of poverty who scarcely stay on the side of propriety, is represented by Mr Bast, a petty clerk whose life is ruined by the well intentioned dabbling of the Mrs Schlegels and Mr Wilcox and who in the end takes involuntary revenge for the wrongs done to him, even at the price of his own life.

    From these different attitudes derives the force which drives the novel forward. The focal point at which these attitudes meet and start to intertwine is 'Howards End', and former farm turned country house, home to Mr Wilcox' first Wife Ruth. Howards End epitomizes the rural side of England, where inner and outer life were still in harmonious union, exemplified by the industrious yeoman. But these times are gone. Howards End and the village in which it is situated are increasingly enveloped by a sprawling London. Its vaporous colours and mists, its noise and pollution do not yet engulf Howards End, but they darken the skies of the London lives of the Mrs Schlegels.

    It is Margaret as the older, more insightful of the two sisters who sees the value of both kinds of life. It is she who will marry Henry Wilcox and define a balance between attitudes. Helen as the more wilful creature is the one who forces the drama of the story. Initially seduced by the male and vigorous lifestyle of the Wilcoxes, who seemingly do not talk cant, she soon discovers the emptiness behind the surface. Turning against all the Wilcoxes stand for drives her into the arms of Mr Bast in a vain attempt to reach out and pull up to her those who have not had a chance.

    Forster's view on his characters is tamed with a great sense of humour. Some of the most comic passages of the book are at the same time some of the most saddening. Forster has a clear vision of the comedy that is human life even at its worst. He writes with a light touch and a good understanding of his characters. The plot has its various surprising twists and turns, which occasionally strain belief, but as is often said: a novel needs to make more sense than life.