Pages: 574 (Hardcover) ISBN: 019254506X Pub: Oxford University Press Pub date: 1951-12 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 404314
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Reader Reviews:A Good Read (1/1 people found this helpful)I have just finished reading this book and I must say that I found it a little disjointed, although there were some real gems of characters in it - Swiveller, the Brasses, Quilp. That's why I've given it a 4 instead of a 3. The "good" characters were, as often in Dickens, rather boring and just too good to be true. Some things were left unsaid: for instance, how did Quilp's wife ever get to marry him!!!! There was a little note at the end that said her mother coerced her, but that part of the story might have been a lot better. All in all worth a read and, despite my criticisms, I wish I could write a fraction as good as Dickens! Twee heroine but revel in the characters (3/4 people found this helpful)The basic set up of this story may have pulled at Victorian heart stings but I thought it just silly : Nell, a young girl (12 I think) is brought into poverty by her uselss gambler of a grandfather and so decides they should both escape from the evil clutches of Quilp and run away to live as travellers in the countryside.
The essence of Charles Dickens (14/14 people found this helpful)This is the story of a little girl called Nell, who together with her grandfather, must run away from a succession of villains in an almost epic journey! You'll find everything here that you love about Charles Dickens: humour, satire, drama, unforgettable characters, laughter, and tears (I read somewhere that when Dickens read The Old Curiosity Shop at his public readings, the audience would actually burst into mass tears!) There are moments of heart-warming joy and moments of despair, and I think anyone with empathy and imagination will love this classic tale of good and evil.
Quite Delightful (4/4 people found this helpful)I found this Charles Dickens novel quite what I expected: vividcharacters, demonic villains, comedy and tragedy together. I especiallyliked Mr. Swiveller and Marchionette. I liked how Swiveller turns out tobe at the end. Quilp was one of the worst villains I ever met inliterature. The parts where Dickens describes the poverty and inhumanconditions in the beginning of the industrialization process are simplytouching. Also towards the end, Nell's wanderings in the ancient town areso foretelling that one cannot help being moved. Although I found the plotto be quite predictable, it takes nothing away from the story. Theillustrations are quite fun too. An amazing piece of work (5/5 people found this helpful)I had bought this book in a multi-buy deal with other classics, and somehow it managed to sit on my bookshelf for almost a year before I got round to reading it - by the time I had finished it, I was kicking myself that it been wasting away for so long! There are so many things going on it, and although some things are just *too* coincidental, it never fails to grab you into the story. Couple this with the fact that Dickens can draw a wonderful picture of London of his time, and you feel part of the whole thing. The characters are wonderful as well - my favourites being Quilp, the evil dwarf, and Richard Swiveller (his antics 'working' in the office were always highly amusing). In short, a real rollercoaster of a novel, thoroughly recommended!! Similar ProductsMartin Chuzzlewit (Wordsworth Classics) Nicholas Nickleby (Wordsworth Classics) Little Dorrit (Wordsworth Classics) The Pickwick Papers (Wordsworth Classics) Barnaby Rudge (Wordsworth Classics) CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
Books -> Subjects -> Fiction -> Authors, A-Z -> D -> Dickens, Charles
Books -> Subjects -> Fiction -> General Books -> Refinements -> Language (feature_browse-bin) -> English
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