A Tale of Two Cities
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A Tale of Two Cities

3.71 of 5 stars 3.71  ·  rating details  ·  403,397 ratings  ·  7,326 reviews
Set against the backdrop of the French Revolution, A Tale of Two Cities is a sprawling tale of London and revolutionary Paris with a complex plot portraying the results of terror and treason, love and supreme sacrifice.

"It was the best of times, it was the worst of times."—opening line of A Tale of Two Cities

It was the time of the French Revolution, a time of great change...more
Audiobook, Unabridged
Published March 2011 by Blackstone Audio (first published 1854)
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(showing 1-30 of 3,000)
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Leslie
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Emma
Christ on a bike - I’d forgotten how much concentration Dickens demands.

Reading the first few chapters of this book was, frankly, a chore. I could not be less bothered about The Mail and the more Dickens banged on about that never ending carriage journey the more I daydreamed about the next book I was going to read once this torture was over. I’m glad I didn’t give up though because as soon as we hit France and the wine shop I was hooked, the pace started to pick up and there were mysteries and...more
Dee
Picking up this book was a brave move. The only Dickens I'd ever managed to plod my way through was Great Expectations. My expectations weren't great and unfortunately it didn't exceed them (probably been tainted by the film version with Gwyneth Paltrow where everything is green). I tried Hard Times and didn't get very far (a poor choice for a novice I'll bet--should have known from the title). I know the general gist of many of his other books and have intended to read them, but three days ago...more
Jason Koivu
Hands down my favorite Dickens' I've read yet! It's got love, sacrifice, revenge, revolt and other exciting verbs! I'm a big fan of a solid marriage between character development and action. A Tale of Two Cities is well-wed. Some criticize Dickens for his trite stories and overblown caricature-esque characters. Yes, the man wrote some less-than-perfect books. He wrote them for a wide-ranging public and he wrote for money. High-minded prose eloquently crafted may garner praise, but it doesn't alw...more
Laura
Years of teaching this novel to teenagers never dimmed my thrill in reading it — if anything, I grew to love it more every time I watched kids gasp aloud at the revelations! Critics are divided on its place in the Dickens canon, but the ones who think it an inferior work are simply deranged. It has everything: dark deeds, revolution, madness, love, thwarted love, forgiveness, revenge, and a stunning act of self-sacrifice. And melodrama! Oh, how Dickens loved melodrama, but in A Tale of Two Citie...more
Melissa Rudder
My primary goal when I'm teaching A Tale of Two Cities to my sophomores is to make them realize that Charles Dickens didn't write creaky, dusty long novels that teachers embraced as a twisted rite of passage for teenagers. Instead, I want them them to understand why Dickens was one of the most popular writers in England and America during his time. I want them to see the book as the suspenseful, comedic, and sentimental piece of entertainment that it is. Because, while A Tale of Two Cities is ma...more
Sparrow
Dec 09, 2012 Sparrow rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Rick Perry
Recommended to Sparrow by: Mr. Zottola
Who are your gods? Whom do you worship in actions, and whom in words? Charles Dickens waggles his finger in my face, the finger of a crone, of a maiden, of a businessman. The polished finger of a marquis, the calloused finger of a knitter. He makes his point with the appropriate number of adjectives and with enough humor to break through the polished shell of morality and reach something true. When you dress your Good up in robes and worship it, maybe what you truly worship is Death. And Dickens...more
Jeannette
Final rating 3-1/2 stars

to paraphrase It was the best of books, it was the worst of books. I have to reconcile slogging thru the first two thirds with the outstanding finish.

My Review

This is the first full-length Dickens' novel I have read. Having watched many film adaptations of his books, I freely admit that he was a great storyteller. Here he presents a tale of the French Revolution, making it very personal by centering the story around one man, former prisoner of the Bastille, Dr. Manette....more
Kaion
Let me tell you, popular culture is not kind about sparing the plot twists of classic literature. If you don't know, say, who stepped out in front of a train, you must have the remarkable preternatural ability to, at a moment's notice, dive under the same rock as those with no idea whose hand was cut of by his dad.

... So how is it that I upon cracking open the front cover, I knew nothing of A Tale of Two Cities other than it took place in the French Revolution and the very famous, very abridged...more
Michael
What a book! After reading this, I've come to appreciate Charles Dickens as so much more than "that guy who wrote the Christmas Carol."

One thing I love is his ability to create a perfect storyline. Everything in this book fits together in the end like a perfect, intricate puzzle. Components that were thought to be gratuitous at first will come back in major ways at later points in the book. Maybe it's just me, but I adore authors who blatantly show that they know exactly where they're going with...more
Hayes
Mt TBR Challenge Buddy Read*

Hmmpf... Jeannette is right (see her review here). Far too much padding for such a brilliant story. I happen to be a Dickens fan, but I am partial to Great Expectations, which is as long, if not longer, yet not one word is wasted. ATo2C, however, could have been half as long, and been a far far better book.

For those of you who just can't bear reading it, you can watch a four-minute film of the story here, thanks to High School Summary. It is the whole story, awash wi...more
K.
May 20, 2013 K. rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: ummm, it's Dickens. Everyone.
Rereading 5/13. This book gets 10 stars. Each and every time. It is yummier and more satisfying than the best chocolate dessert you can imagine ;)

Can't WAIT to discuss this book with some fortunate youth, most of whom are coming to Dickens for the first time. How lucky for them!

Kids. DON'T GIVE UP!!!

The beginning chapters of this book can give grown-ups fits. Just roll with it and get what you can and forget the rest. I promise that as you read you will begin to get the language. AND it's not s...more
Keith Mukai
This was the only book I remember enjoying from my high school English classes. Re-reading it twelve years later I can see why I liked it so much--and still do.

Dickens lays it on pretty thick in parts and is perhaps trying too hard to evoke the passions and bloodlust of the French Revolution. And as lovely as dear Lucie Mannette is, she's pretty unbearable by modern women's standards. But don't worry, Dickens isn't a misogynist. He more than makes up for Lucie in the characters of Madame Defarge...more
Kelly
May 22, 2009 Kelly rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Brit lit dorks, history geeks
Say what you want about this book. Overdone, overblown, overly dramatic. Yes. He drops anvils like Wylde E. Coyote. He's about as subtle as my dog when he needs to pee. Yes. But I love this book anyway. I just adore it, and you can't talk me out of it! It is my favorite Dickens novel.

All of the aforementioned may be completely true, but I think that with the subject and time period that Dickens is dealing with, he can get away with it. Was there anything subtle or restrained about the Terror? I'...more
Erik
A Tale of Two Cities holds the dubious honor of being the first book I ever picked up and failed to finish. The very first.

From there, it's all gone downhill. Just look at my reviews where I casually admit to throwing away classics unread. A Light in August, Lolita, The Elegance of the Hedgehog, etc, etc...

If you enjoy the little things, like being sane and not hating life, then I recommend you never pick this up.
David
This is another one of those Charles Dickens classics I was supposed to read as a kid and never did. Since I've never seen any of the movies either, it was actually pretty unspoiled for me, though I did know how it ends (anyone growing up in the English-speaking world can hardly have avoided knowing Sydney Carton's famous last lines: "It is a far, far better thing that I do, than I have ever done; it is a far, far better rest that I go to than I have ever known.".

Once again, I am in awe of Dicke...more
Tammy
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Brad
A great multi-sited novel centering on the French revolution.

My generic comment about Charles Dickens:
First of all, although I am a partisan of Dickens' writing and have read and relished most his works, I concede to three flaws in his oeuvre that are not insignificant. First, while he seemed to develop an almost endless variety of male social types, his female characters are much less well developed. Second, although he portrayed the stark brutality of economic and class inequality with unparal...more
Phoebe
A reaction, written by sixteen-year-old Phoebe (and submitted to my lovely English teacher, Mrs. S., in lieu of a summer reading essay):

I've got nothing to say, but it's okay ..or is it?

I'm risking my grade to write this, I know, but I just have to get this off my chest. After stressing my brain for two and a half days I have come to the following conclusion: The second book of A Tale of Two Cities utterly and completely bored me. I can think of nothing of substance to write about, other than th...more
Sps
Awfully witty and fun. Though I'll admit to sometimes getting lost and confused in descriptive passages, and that the thunderheads of the French Revolution are teetering between melodrama and the Donner Party. If Jacques is going to take down the nobility, then do it already. Quit with the gloomy, meaningful knitting, my good madame.


Frequently there are these wonderful strings of words that are undoubtedly Statistically Improbable Phrases. (Amazon's are the fairly unremarkable 'immovable close,...more
Michelle
First of all, I'd like to give this book 4.5 stars. (Why is it so hard to be confined by the one-star increments?) It is a great book, I just can't give it my very highest rating. I wonder if it is suffering somewhat in comparison to The Count of Monte Cristo, which I read right before A Tale of Two Cities, and I loved that one SO much.

In any case, I'm just thrilled that I finally read this book! I have been suffering for some time now as the result of not having read it. I have felt like a pseu...more
Sheila
Oct 03, 2012 Sheila rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: classic literature fans
Recommended to Sheila by: David Copperfield
Shelves: owned, classic, reviewed
My first Charles Dickens and it was fairly difficult.

I was unfamiliar with the author's abundant use of language combined with satire, but I was very satisfied in the end. It's probably the second novel (the first is Orwell's 1984) I've read that has an ending which is so deserving of the previous pages that one feels it came too soon.

In short, it's a classic.

In brief, A Tale of Two Cities is the story of the devoted Lucie Manette and his unfairly imprisoned father, Dr. Manette and their esca...more
Naile Berna
I read this book as part of a book club. It was very challenging at the beginning, I had to use wikipedia let alone webster dictionary. After the first 50 pages either I got used to Dickens' language or he simplified things a bit...

For some reason, (most likely through the literature I've read like Bernard Show and Ishiguro Kazuo) I feel a misplaced Nostalgia of England in early nineteenth century when I read the lines of English servants talking to their masters: "Yes, sir. .... sir, ... sir."...more
Danger
About 30 pages into this book, I was struck with a moment of panic:

WHAT'S GOING ON HERE? WHERE THE HELL IS GARFIELD?!?

Had the lasagna-loving feline been uncerimoniously behead on the guillotine before the happenings of page 1? Without my favorite cartoon cat's wry, laid-back sense of wit these are surely THE WORST OF TIMES!

That is when I realized I was reading the classic text A Tale of Two CITIES, by Charles Dickens and not watching the 2006 cinematic masterpiece Garfield: A TAIL of Two KITTIES...more
Cinnamon
This review may also be found on A Thousand Little Pages.

Schoolwork is rarely pleasant, only mandatory and often mind-numbingly boring. I was expecting such when my English teacher announced the next book in our curriculum. With the memory of my attempt and failure at staying awake while viewing the movie adaptation of A Tale of Two Cities in History class last year still fresh in my mind, I flipped to the first page of my shiny new paperback feeling like I was participating in the beginnings of...more
Hazel
Jan 09, 2012 Hazel rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Meredith
Shelves: literary-fiction
A colleague of mine recommends reading one of Dickens' novels every year. I thought that was a splendid idea, and I remembered it today when I found the 1958 movie on tv. This is the one with a perfectly cast Dirk Bogarde, as Sydney Carton. Very good supporting cast, too; a too-thin, but chilling and convincing Madame Defarge, Donald Pleasance as the oily little informer, Bas(t)ard, Ian Bannen and Christopher Lee and Leo McKern, all perfect in small roles. I started weeping when the first tumbri...more
Lori Anderson
***** SPOILER ALERT -- IF YOU HAVEN'T READ THE BOOK, GO NO FURTHER! ******


"A Tale of Two Cities" is one of those books that a lot of people THINK they've read, but never have, because it has an ending that nearly everyone knows -- one man trades his life for another under the guillitine. I knew how it ended, but also knew I'd never read the book, and felt it was high time to get on with it.

There's a lot more to it than just swapping Man A with Man B. There's intrigue, plot twists, lots of histor...more
Brad
A painful beast of a book. It took me five attempts to get past page one hundred, and when I finally did break that barrier I pressed on until the very end so that I didn't have to suffer ever again.

Dickens is a problem for me. I admit it freely.

There was a time, many years ago, when I was a fan. I read Great Expectations for the first time in grade four, and I was in love with the book and Dickens. And I imagine that some part of my social consciousness, which wasn't a gift from my parents, was...more
Werner
Mar 27, 2009 Werner rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Fans of 19th century fiction
Most of Dickens' novels were set in his own time; this was one of only two forays he made into historical fiction (both of which are set in the time of the generation immediately before his own, for which he could still draw on the impressions of living witnesses) but in it, he managed to produce one of the genre's timeless classics. All of the best traits of his writing are here: his unequaled characterizations, his mastery of plotting, his passionate sense of justice, his ability to evoke the...more
Meghan Davison
I started reading this book in an effort to whittle away at my ever-growing "classics to read" list and expected it to be a completely perfunctory experience, so I was surprised at how much I enjoyed it. I rarely read anything that is older than I am, so the style and syntax were a bit off-putting at times. Dickens' sentences are long and littered with commas, but that was honestly the only thing that made the novel feel dated. Dickens is funny and sarcastic-- and his sarcasm is the best kind, i...more
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A Tale of Two Cities (Paperback)
A Tale of Two Cities (Paperback)
A Tale of Two Cities (Paperback)
A Tale of Two Cities (Paperback)
A Tale of Two Cities (Signet Classics)

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A prolific 19th Century author of short stories, plays, novellas, novels, fiction and non-fiction; during his lifetime Dickens became known the world over for his remarkable characters, his mastery of prose in the telling of their lives, and his depictions of the social classes, morals and values of his times. Some considered him the spokesman for the poor, for he definitely brought much awarenes...more
More about Charles Dickens...
Great Expectations A Christmas Carol Oliver Twist David Copperfield Bleak House

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“A wonderful fact to reflect upon, that every human creature is constituted to be that profound secret and mystery to every other.” 1,372 people liked it
“It is a far, far better thing that I do, than I have ever done; it is a far, far better rest that I go to than I have ever known.” 994 people liked it
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