Olive Schreiner

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Olive Schreiner


Born
in Wittebergen, Eastern Cape, South Africa
March 24, 1855

Died
December 11, 1920


Olive Schreiner (24 March 1855 - December 11, 1920), was a South African author, pacifist and political activist. She is best known for her novel The Story of an African Farm, which has been acclaimed for the manner it tackled the issues of its day, ranging from agnosticism to the treatment of women.

From Wikipedia:
Olive Emilie Albertina Schreiner (1855-1920) was named after her three older brothers, Oliver (1848-1854), Albert (1843-1843) and Emile (1852-1852), who died before she was born. She was the ninth of twelve children born to a missionary couple, Gottlob Schreiner and Rebecca Lyndall at the Wesleyan Missionary Society station at Wittebergen in the Eastern Cape, near Herschel in South Africa. Her childhood was a harsh one: her father
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Average rating: 3.59 · 4,133 ratings · 477 reviews · 122 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Story of an African Farm

3.53 avg rating — 2,944 ratings — published 1883 — 318 editions
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Dreams

3.98 avg rating — 251 ratings — published 1890
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Trooper Peter Halket of Mas...

3.48 avg rating — 69 ratings — published 1897
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Woman and Labour

3.42 avg rating — 57 ratings — published 1911 — 212 editions
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La rosa di una donna

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3.66 avg rating — 53 ratings — published 1893
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Dream Life and Real Life; A...

3.51 avg rating — 35 ratings — published 1893
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Three Dreams in a Desert

3.32 avg rating — 37 ratings — published 1887 — 2 editions
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The Buddhist Priest's Wife

3.58 avg rating — 24 ratings
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In a Far-Off World

2.37 avg rating — 27 ratings
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Undine

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really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 11 ratings — published 1928 — 8 editions
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More books by Olive Schreiner…
Quotes by Olive Schreiner  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“The woman wanderer goes forth to seek the Land of Freedom.

“How am I to get there?” Reason answers: “here is one way, and one only. Down the banks of Labour, through the water of suffering. There is no other.”

The woman cries out: “For what do I go to this far land which no one has ever reached? Oh, I am alone! I am utterly alone!”

But soon she hears the sounds of feet, ‘a thousand times ten thousand and thousands of thousands, and they beat this way!’

“They are the feet of those who shall follow you. Lead on.”
Olive Schreiner

“I would like to say to the men and women of the generations which will come after us: you will look back at us with astonishment. You will wonder at passionate struggles that accomplished so little, at the, to you, obvious paths to attain our ends which we did not take. At the intolerable evils before which it will seem to you we sat down passive. At the great truths staring us in the face which we failed to see, at the great truths we grasped at but could not get our fingers quite 'round. You will marvel at the labour that ended in so little. But what you will never know that it was how we were thinking of you and for you that we struggled as we did and accomplished the little that we have done. That it was in the thought of your larger realization and fuller life that we have found consolation for the futilities of our own. All I aspire to be and was not, comforts me.”
Olive Schreiner, Woman and Labor

“We have been so blinded by thinking and feeling that we have never seen the World.”
Olive Schreiner, The Story of an African Farm

Polls

May 2017 Old School Classic Poll

 
  61 votes, 18.5%

Dead Souls by Nikolai Gogol, 1842, 512 pages
 
  59 votes, 17.9%

The Divine Comedy by Dante Alighieri, 1320, 798 pages
 
  49 votes, 14.8%

Silas Marner by George Eliot, 1861, 248 pages
 
  37 votes, 11.2%

The Black Tulip by Alexandre Dumas, 1850, 246 pages
 
  31 votes, 9.4%

 
  26 votes, 7.9%

 
  21 votes, 6.4%

 
  16 votes, 4.8%

Germinal by Émile Zola, 1885, 592 pages
 
  16 votes, 4.8%

Père Goriot by Honoré de Balzac, 1834, 370 pages
 
  12 votes, 3.6%

 
  2 votes, 0.6%

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