"Red Letter" and "House of The Great Gables" Nathaniel Hawthorne is one of America's most famous authors and is the two most famous novels, "Red Letter" and "Seven Gable Houses". He showed his wonderful talent. When comparing these two books, it seems strange because the plot is very different. The book seems very different, but the central theme is closely related to Hawthorn's style (Carey, p. 62). The most famous works of American novelist Nathaniel Hawthorne are "Scarlet Letter" and "House of Seven Houses", which are closely related to the creation and style of themes, symbols and characters.
There are many differences between "Red Letter" and "Seven Gable Houses". Seven Gables House seems to be more adaptable to the United States than any other novel - it includes various social, economic and technological phenomena. This novel uses hypnotism and fantasies extensively, including class conflict, commercial and political conspiracy, and serious involvement in sexual identity and role issues. Hepzibah Pyncheon made it possible for Hawthorne to do the work on Salem's street, as it absolutely required money that could represent the traffic on the street that could not enter the nobleman of the house, I decided to open a new one. Hepzibah felt embarrassed when her client found "I am really thinking that I am not equality with my customers and boss" (2: 54)
Offered by the Lord. Scarlet Letter written by Nathaniel Hawthorne is known for other works such as The House of Seven Gables and Young Goodman Brown. He is also romantic and anti-transcendental. The red letter is about a woman named Hester - Plein who lived in Boston in the 1640s. She was humiliated publicly in front of the public because she was arrested for committing adultery. The town thinks that it is the best punishment to have her get her scarlet "A" on her chest.
Hawthorne wrote seven houses for gable as an antidote to 'red words'. He once boasted to James T. Fields that the end of "Red Letter" broke the heart of his wife and "to let him sleep for a bad headache" - the reader replied what he called "success" (16: 311) - He wants to write a different book. When he explained the reaction of Sofia to the "seven gable houses", he is proud that the book has made tremendous success from the massacre, that is, "from my wife" I can. 386). As Sophia's judgment continues to say that he likes this new book "red letter", he seems to have influenced Hawthorne 's own view of his book.