Pages: 544 (Paperback) ISBN: 048641776X Pub: Dover Publications Inc. Pub date: 2001-06-01 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 372572
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Reader Reviews:Depth required to set up brilliant ending (0/0 people found this helpful)A few reviews here have said the majority of the book is needlessly detailled and long and drawn out. I whole heartedly disagree with them.
The best of times, the best of endings (0/0 people found this helpful)Yes, its difficult to get into, but the payoff at the end makes it worthwhile. Its the best ending in British literature, also the most uplifting, and the saddest ... Read it and weep, and read it again and again A Stunning Read (3/3 people found this helpful)I had to read this for a course on Dickens at University and I found it an absolutely wonderful read. The start may seem slow but Dickens inevitably and necessarily takes time to paint his characters in intricate detail. The story progresses with Dickens' inimitable style and the ending moved me to tears. A must for any Dickens fan but perhaps not an ideal first read for a new-comer to Dickens (I would suggest Nicholas Nickleby for that). A Tale of Two Citys (0/12 people found this helpful)Although I do agree that the beginning of this all time classic is a bit slow, I would not confine it to the first 150 pages, indeed all but the last 100 could have been taken out and, substituted for something a little less dull. However, for the last 100 pages it is well worth ploughing through the slow opening. Also this book is an incredible, and (for the last 100 pages) interesting way to increase your knowledge of the French Revolution. Worth reading, but patience is required (3/5 people found this helpful)If you can make it past the first 150 pages of the book then you're on your way to enjoying it, it's a good story, but the beginning is torture. If during the first 150 pages some freak had stolen the book from me, I would have been quite happy, and read a box of cereal instead. This box of cereal would have quite impressed me with its entertainment value. So if you like brief suffering followed by a long term pay off, then I recommend this book. The story eventually takes off, and happily you discover that 25 hours of your life have not been lost in vain. Similar ProductsDavid Copperfield (Wordsworth Classics) Bleak House (Wordsworth Classics) The Old Curiosity Shop (Wordsworth Classics) Nicholas Nickleby (Wordsworth Classics) The Pickwick Papers (Wordsworth Classics) CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
Books -> Subjects -> Fiction -> Authors, A-Z -> D -> Dickens, Charles
Books -> Subjects -> Fiction -> World -> French Books -> Subjects -> Fiction -> General Books -> Refinements -> Language (feature_browse-bin) -> English Books -> Refinements -> Age (feature_two_browse-bin) Books -> Refinements -> Format (binding_browse-bin) -> Paperback Books -> Refinements -> Condition (condition-type)
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