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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Dickens", sorted by average review score:

Great Expectations (Dover Thrift Editions)
Published in Paperback by Dover Pubns (July, 2001)
Authors: Charles Dickens and Daniel Defoe
Average review score:

Dickens at his best!
I absoulutely love this book! I was required to read Great Expectations for school, and what I thought was going to be a long and dull school novel turned out to be my favorite book of all times. It has everything that you could want in a story; life lessons, mystery, love, sadness, regret, passion, and so much more! If you enjoy reading about life's twists and turns, like the way Dickens writes, or you just want to read a good book, Great Expectations is the perfect choice. You will instantly fall in love with this Charles Dickens classic!


Great Expectations (The Clarendon Dickens)
Published in Hardcover by Oxford Univ Pr (April, 1994)
Authors: Charles Dickens and Margaret Cardwell
Average review score:

Dickens' Best
This edition of Dickens' Great Expectations is considered one of, if not THE scholarly edition now in print. It contains a cogent introduction to the novel and an exhaustive appendix. Although the price will keep many, if not all, from purchasing the book it is definetly look for from a library--looking in a university's library is probably the best bet for finding a copy.


Great Expectations: Authoritative Text, Backgrounds, Contexts, Criticism (Norton Critical Editions)
Published in Paperback by W.W. Norton & Company (January, 1999)
Authors: Charles Dickens, Edgar Rosenberg, and Dickens Charles
Average review score:

Great Expectations
Pip,a poor orphan boy living with his sister and her husband, who is the village blacksmith, wishes for the new world to live life of a gentlemen in. As if an answer to his wishes, Pips learns from Mr. Jagger that he has been given an enormous quantity of money from a secret benefctor, this money is enough to live the life of a wealthy gentlemen in London. There he stayes with Herbert Pockt. When he sees Estella the girl of his dreams, the adopted girl of the rich, Miss Havisham. To find out who his benefactor and what happenes with Estelaa you have to read this truely great story for it is called "Great" "Expectatons."


The Happy Prisoner
Published in Audio Cassette by Isis Audio (December, 1994)
Authors: Monica Dickens, Sheila Mitchell, and Sheila Dickens
Average review score:

Meet the family
You walk into Olivers home as he reads under the lamplight nursing a 2nd world war won heart wound and a leg that will not heal. You end up being on such intimate terms with the whole family that in order to reaquaint yourself with them you read the book over and over and marvel at her gift, a copy of this book is in the bedside table drawer of every member of my family. A Treasure


Hard Times: An Authoritative Text, Backgrounds, Sources, and Contemporary Reactions, Criticism (Norton Critical Edition)
Published in Paperback by W W Norton & Co. (December, 1990)
Authors: Charles Dickens, George Ford, and Sylvere Monod
Average review score:

"'Tis a muddle"
Or so says Stephen Blackpool. Like many of the Hands (factory workers), Stephen Blackpool feels stuck in a life of mediocrity. He and others like him are trampled by the Mr. Gradgrinds and Mr. Bounderbys of the world...

Hard Times is Dickens' critique of just how evil capitalism is at its heart. Before modifications of capitalism (like sexual harassment laws, child labor laws, civil rights, the 40-hour work week), commercial life, especially factory work, was dangerous to not only the body, but the mind (some would argue that this still is the case). And when someone wants out of that life, it isn't always as easy as walking away.

Dickens also criticizes the Gradgrind philosophy of Fact, Fact, Fact! There is no pleasure found in Fancy or imagination according to Mr. Gradgrind, and Gradgrind drills this into his students and children. The results of his philosophy do not surface right away. However, soon his daughter lapses into indifference, his son rebels and becomes a selfish thief, and a student of Gradgrind's (Bitzer) shows the coldness of Fact, Fact, Fact.

The symbolism is often blatant and comical (such as the name of one teacher, Mr. M'ChoakumChilde), but there is also some very disturbing criticism (reality will take a "wolfish turn, and make an end of you") that still gives me the chills.

Also, there is a mass of scholarly criticism that rivals the novel in length, a very nice addition.

This is truly one of Dickens' great works. It is just as powerful as "A Tale of Two Cities."


How to Cope With Mental Illness in Your Family: A Self-Care Guide for Siblings, Offspring, and Parents
Published in Paperback by J. P. Tarcher (May, 1998)
Authors: Diane T. Marsh, Rex M. Dickens, and E. Fuller Torrey
Average review score:

Siblings, etc...
A very cogent work, sincerely motivated (so it seems) out of desire to assist those who are faced with reconciling their own behavior in light of the demands and constraints of having a sibling (or more..or other family) who are personally challenged with mental illness. Highly recommended if your in such a position or assisting someone who is.


The Hoydens and Mr. Dickens: The Strange Affair of the Feminist Phantom
Published in Hardcover by St. Martin's Press (February, 1997)
Author: William J. Palmer
Average review score:

Palmer "captures" Victorian England much the way Dickens did
Palmer's third book in this "series" continues to capture Victorian England; he is able to evoke the landscape and atmosphere of the time, of the place, and of the characters. Most don't. Aside from Anne Perry and Michael Crichton's "Great Train Robbery," I have not read such convincing Victoriana and the accompanying hypocrisy. Palmer is able to sustain the reader's interest throughout, particularly with his use of other "real" characters such as Florence Nightingale. He is able to make Dickens quite the human character!


The Invisible Woman: The Story of Nelly Ternan and Charles Dickens
Published in Paperback by Vintage Books (December, 1992)
Author: Claire Tomalin
Average review score:

Tomalin is a great biographer
How many millions of words have been written about Charles Dickens? Many thousands in one famous biography alone (Ackroyd). Nelly Terman is there as the Mistress character in most of those, but what do we learn about Nelly? Nothing - until this biography.

It reads almost as a detective story as Tomalin uncovers not only the story of Terman-with-Dickens, but as much about Terman the woman as she can.

Highly recommended.


The Life of Our Lord
Published in Paperback by Westminster John Knox Press (September, 1996)
Author: Charles Dickens
Average review score:

A father's timeless gift
This slender volume is Charles Dickens' written interpertation on the four Gospels. He made the provision that it was not to be published until much later. It is a father's testimony of the truth of the things he held dear. A real treasure.


Little Dorrit Part 2 Of 2
Published in Audio Cassette by Books on Tape, Inc. (01 November, 1993)
Author: Charles Dickens
Average review score:

Great Recording
This recording is superb! Like all of Dickens these tapes show excelent writing skills!


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