Which Charles Dickens?

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Original Poster:

1,288 posts

190 months

Wednesday 4th September 2013
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Having never ventured into Dickens' books, I'm keen to give him a try.

Any recommendations on where to start, in order to get a good feel for what the author is about? Any must reads? I am looking for a relatively short book (<250 printed pages) if possible.

Cheers!

M888SXY

312 posts

158 months

Wednesday 4th September 2013
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I've just read my first, a bit longer at 400+ pages I seem to remember. Bleak House. Thoroughly enjoyed it, almost humorous in places. Very descriptive.

Ayahuasca

27,427 posts

280 months

Thursday 5th September 2013
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David Copperfield.

It was Dickens' own favourite.

Mine too.

LC23

1,285 posts

226 months

Thursday 5th September 2013
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I've read about half of Dickens books. Currently reading Edwin Drood. I wouldn't start with Bleak House personally. David Copperfield is a good one to start as above. Oliver Twist is actually very good as well as is Pickwick Papers. That is very long however.

TwigtheWonderkid

43,406 posts

151 months

Thursday 5th September 2013
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Dombey & Son.

LC23

1,285 posts

226 months

Thursday 5th September 2013
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Double post

Edited by LC23 on Friday 6th September 07:16

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Original Poster:

1,288 posts

190 months

Sunday 8th September 2013
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Just finished the first 'book' of Tale of Two Cities. So far so good.

Ayahuasca

27,427 posts

280 months

Sunday 8th September 2013
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Progressive said:
Just finished the first 'book' of Tale of Two Cities. So far so good.
I liked A Tale of Two Cities but it does not have any of the humour of say Copperfield.

Progressive

Original Poster:

1,288 posts

190 months

Monday 9th September 2013
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Ayahuasca said:
I liked A Tale of Two Cities but it does not have any of the humour of say Copperfield.
I compared a few and decided that the topic and plot were particularly interesting to me. 25% in. Impressed so far so will likely move onto further of his work.

cherryyi

27 posts

128 months

Wednesday 11th September 2013
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Hard Times and A Tale of Two Cities are his most famous works.

Ayahuasca

27,427 posts

280 months

Wednesday 11th September 2013
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cherryyi said:
Hard Times and A Tale of Two Cities are his most famous works.
I would think A Christmas Carol is most widely known.

Alex

9,975 posts

285 months

Wednesday 11th September 2013
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I would start with Great Expectations. It's the most accessible Dickens novel, IMO.

cherryyi

27 posts

128 months

Thursday 12th September 2013
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Ayahuasca said:
I would think A Christmas Carol is most widely known.
Oh, really?

Alfachick

1,639 posts

198 months

Tuesday 17th September 2013
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I would also start with great expectations. It's the one I started with and it surprisingly accessible and also funny.
Bleak house is not a good one to start on, it's very dry and in my opinion was boring, it talks a lot about the legal system of the time.
David Copperfield is another good one to start with and is also quite funny, the aunt was my favourite character.
I haven't got round to reading any more of them but they are in the "to read" pile.

Alex

9,975 posts

285 months

Tuesday 17th September 2013
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There's also Oliver Twist, of course. I found that quite heavy going.

silverthorn2151

6,298 posts

180 months

Tuesday 17th September 2013
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Pickwick Papers is a very fine book.

Some of the others mentioned here I have had interminable problems with.

gbbird

5,186 posts

245 months

Thursday 26th September 2013
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Am surprised no-one has mentioned Little Dorritt as a good introduction to the wonderful world of Dickens. Slightly more than 250 pages, but it is a very accessible novel.

K12beano

20,854 posts

276 months

Tuesday 1st October 2013
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I always feel I *should* be reading Dickens.

The nearest I've ever got is listening to "Bleak Expectations". (Mind you, if all Dickens were like that....)

HappyTorque

1,500 posts

220 months

Wednesday 18th December 2013
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Bleak House is brilliant but do not start with this. It is a huge, wonderful but challenging book.

Suggestions:

David Copperfield. Superb and great characters.

Nicholas Nickleby: as above

Dombey and Son: I loved this but it is perhaps a bit harder to get through

Hard Times: interesting. Just re-read this. Very strong message about the industrial revolution, classic Dickensian writing, interesting story but none of the main characters were very memorable - that are all a bit obvious.

Great expectations: one of the more famous books but for me none of the main characters were particularly engaging. Damn good yarn though.

Oliver Twist: yup, one of the best

A Tale of Two Titties ( excuse the Monty Python pun): great book but for some reason it is my nemesis - it took.several attempts to get through it.

The other thing about Dickens is that it takes a while to get in to his style of writing. He is not an author who you can read a few pages at a time before bed - or at least I can't. You need to commit and really dive in. Then he is just mesmerisingly good!

Just my 2 cents worth.








Ayahuasca

27,427 posts

280 months

Thursday 19th December 2013
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Bleak House is my next one.