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Stop What You’re Doing and Read…To Warm You in Cold Weather: Little Women And Good Wives & The Cranford Chronicles
Stop What You’re Doing and Read…To Warm You in Cold Weather: Little Women And Good Wives & The Cranford Chronicles
Jul 8, 2025 3:52 AM

Author:Elizabeth Gaskell,Louisa May Alcott

Stop What You’re Doing and Read…To Warm You in Cold Weather: Little Women And Good Wives & The Cranford Chronicles

To mark the publication of Stop What You're Doing and Read This!, a collection of essays celebrating reading, Vintage Classics are releasing 12 limited edition themed ebook 'bundles', to tempt readers to discover and rediscover great books.

LITTLE WOMEN & GOOD WIVES

Life in the March household is full of adventures and accidents as the four very different March sisters follow their varying paths to adulthood, always maintaining the special bond between them. Sensible Meg, impetuous Jo, shy Beth and artistic Amy each have to confront different challenges as they grow up together and attempt to learn how to be both happy and good.

THE CRANFORD CHRONICLES

Follow the small absurdities and major tragedies in the lives of the people of Cranford, a small Cheshire market town, during one extraordinary year.

The railway is pushing its way relentlessly towards the town from Manchester, bringing fears of migrant workers and the breakdown of law and order. The arrival of handsome young Doctor Harrison causes yet further agitation not just because of his revolutionary methods but also because of his effect on the hearts of the ladies. Meanwhile Miss Matty's memories of long-ago heartache are rekindled.

Reviews

Little Women deals with life's big questions - love and death, war and peace, and ambition versus family responsibility - in a way that is inspiring and realistic. Use a hankie as a bookmark - tears are guaranteed

—— Marie Claire

THE CRANFORD CHRONICLES - Pah! to Dickens. Eat your heart out, Little Nell. That Elizabeth Gaskell could write a death scene to make your socks melt

—— Scotsman

A real novel and a good one...from the busy brain of a born storyteller

—— New York Times

A thoroughly entertaining comic novel

—— Newsday

A funny and macabre novel

—— Washington Post

In the world of Flagg, plots, situations and outcomes that would normally make you fling a book across the room, here just have you reading on, smiling and hoping

—— Julie Myerson , Guardian

Lodge's vignettes of army life are spiced with a wit that is both droll and mordant, and his characters are deftly rendered...Lodge's novel is a moving glimpse of a world on the cusp of a change: Janus-faced, profound above all in its uncertainties.

—— Lettie Ransley , Observer

An engrossing novel

—— Image Magazine

She represents historical research as exciting, romantic and as offering personal catharsis.

—— History Today

Maxwell's achievement is to show how human relationships work in spite of the confines of history, language and nationality

—— Daily Telegraph

Stylishly, subtly, the enjoyment of getting to know another country is conveyed with authority and a perceptions that's rare in our careless times

—— The Oldie

An incredibly emotional read

—— Grazia

A thrilling page-turner

—— Alexander Larman , Spectator

This is a novel that strikes both horror and joy in the reader, the first-person narration deftly articulating Judith's escalating confusion and fear ... A talent to watch

—— Lucy Scholes , The Sunday Times

A touching, delicate book, it's hitting the shelves with high hopes...On March 1, head out and buy Grace McCleen's book

—— Louis Wise , Sunday Times

A distinctive debut that pulls off the use of a child narrator in delightful style

—— We Love This Book

Touching and funny… a compelling and wholly original debut.

—— Marie Claire

Shimmers with little miracles.

—— Peggy Hughes , Scotland on Sunday

This is a promisingly bold book and McCleen is a talent to watch

—— Lucy Scholes , Sunday Times

A gripping and mesmerizing debut of an unforgettable ten-year-old heroine and her battle with good and evil… A harrowing and powerful story about isolation and belonging

—— My Weekly

An original new voice... Haunting and absorbing, this is a joy to read

—— Jackie Carrier , Suffolk Free Press

A seemingly slight work that is, in fact, possessed of almost infinite depth. It's an elegant inquiry into what we can know and how we can know it - and it's gripping too

—— Erica Wagner , The Times, Books of the Year

It sets off a moving meditation on ageing, regret and the unreliability of memory

—— Sunday Express, Books of the Year

Has rightly been praised for its economy and elegance

—— Margaret Drabble , Guardian, Books of the Year

Belatedly and deservedly, this was the year of Julian Barnes

—— Mark Lawson , Guardian, Books of the Year

Exquisitely written and deeply engaging

—— Lorrie Moore , Guardian, Books of the Year

Elegant verbal exactness, analytic finesse and a witty portrayal of contemporary and 1960's life complement the intricate plot

—— Peter Kemp , Sunday Times, Books of the Year

A worthy Booker laureate of this or any other year, our most versatile novelist...a perfect present in these last days of the book as a singular object

—— Philip French , Observer, Books of the Year

A worthy winner of this year's Booker prize: short, but certainly not slight, precise and insightful

—— Kate Cunningham , Herald, Books of the Year

This novel packed more emotion into its 150 pages than any other I have read this year

—— Bob McDevitt , Herald, Books of the Year

Melancholic, suspenseful and thought-provoking

—— Kirsty Wark , Herald, Books of the Year

Several plot twists later, what started off as a thoughtful (and fascinating) meditation on memory becomes something close to a full blown thriller

—— James Walton , Daily Mail

Essential reading for any writer, aspiring or otherwise

—— Patrick Keogh , Guardian

A meditation on memory and regret slyly conveyed through the unreliable voice of a complacent man whose past gives him a nasty surprise

—— Justine Jordan , Guardian

A deserving winner

—— Éibhear Walshe , Irish Times, Books of the Year

Masterful, gripping and, above all, surprising

—— Victoria Hislop , The Week, Books of the Year

Barnes has always has an ear for the bleak comedy of the first person

—— Olivia Cole , GQ

Novel, fertile and memorable

—— Justine Jordan , Guardian

Julian Barnes’ Man-Booker prize-winning novel has extraordinary power and emotional density

—— Simon Shaw , Mail on Sunday

An eloquent meditation on relationships, emotional arrogance and the discomfort of remorse

—— James Urquhart , Financial Times

The key to this slender, tantalizing mystery is on its opening page: what you end up remembering isn’t always the same as what you have witnessed

—— Katie Owen , Daily Telegraph

His art is artful, often openly so, but never showy or obvious

—— Colm Toibin , New York Review

Described in Justin Cartwright’s review as 'a very fine book, skillfully plotted, boldly conceived’

—— Guardian, Holiday Reads

I am eager to read it, though I hear it needs to be read twice to be fully appreciated

—— Colm O'Gorman , Independent
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