Indiana
FictionClassicsRomance

Indiana

by George Sand

Publisher
CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
Pages
236
Language
English
Published
1992

Overview

George Sand's Indiana is a pointed novel of marriage, desire, and social confinement, framed through a young woman's growing awareness of how little freedom polite society actually offers her. The book moves with emotional intensity, but its power comes from the clash between romantic ideals and the ordinary damage done by convention.

Readers drawn to classic fiction, feminist themes, and psychologically attentive drama will find a sharp portrait of domestic unhappiness and self-assertion. Indiana remains compelling because it treats love, class, and independence as lived questions rather than abstract ideas, and George Sand gives those tensions a voice that still feels direct and alive. It is also a strong fit for readers who want a classic argument for female autonomy within domestic fiction.

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