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- Published on: 1677
- Binding: Hardcover
Customer Reviews
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
Not for me.
By David
I know its a classic but..... Having just finished Nicholas Nickleby I was expecting a similarly gripping story that drew me in to the atmosphere of the age in Dickens' inimitable style. I struggled to finish the book and found it heavy going. Sorry to all fans of Dickens - I usually like his work (I even enjoyed 'hard times!) but I found this very complex.and to have just too much unnecessary detail. Other readers suggest that the kindle edition (that I read) is not the best so perhaps I am being unfair. Parts of it though require a level of concentration that makes it more of a chore than a pleasure to read.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
Must read classic novel.
By Doobleshaft
Many times I have read this book and seen films based on the book. The story of a boy taken from poverty, taken out of a life leading to crime and then into a life of comfort is a great story that makes you reaslise what those less fortunate than us can go through.A must read classic novel but consider other Charles Dickens novels too.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
One of his best: vivid and gripping.
By Jason Mills
This is one of Dickens' most satisfying novels. Although there is the usual scaffolding of coincidence holding things up, it's well buried, and the narrative feels tight and structured, the humorous and macabre early scenes of the Cruncher family being the only indulgence.From the famous opening line to the even more famous close, the writing is solid and assured. There are magnificent passages of description, such as Mr Lorry's feverish dream and the French citizens scrabbling for wine from a broken cask, an overt and beautifully apt metaphor for the blood that will run in the streets later.There is some sentimentality in the depiction of Dr Manette's fragile mental health, and his daughter's angelic nature is a stretch; but these are minor cavils. Whilst there is some meat on the bones of Charles Darnay, and Madame Defarge is as formidable as a Bond villain, it is the dissolute Sydney Carton who is the star of the book: his keen awareness of his own failure in life is affecting and compelling.As the story grinds to its appalling and redemptive conclusion, it carries the reader along like a doomed prisoner in a tumbril heading to the guillotine, with the inevitability of Shakespearean tragedy. Dickens' horror at the Revolution's bloodshed is balanced by his righteous fury at the universal injustice that brought it about, leading to a novel that is nigh on perfect in its (if you will) execution...
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