book data
20595 ratings, 3.88 average rating, 1573 reviews
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published
December 31st 1999
(first published 1859)
by Dover Publications
binding
Paperback, 304 pages
isbn
0486406512
(isbn13: 9780486406510)
description
Against the backdrop of the French Revolution, Dickens unfolds a masterpiece of drama, adventure, and courage featuring Charles Darnay, a man falsely ...more
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avg 3.88
Most satisfying ending in the English language.
Yes, the last line is a classic ("It is a far, far better thing ..."), concluding, in astonishingly concise language (for Dickens), the peace and redemption of the story's most poignant romantic hero. But this novel delivers such a gratifying experience because there are, in fact, many characters who cover significant emotional ground in their journey to love one woman as best they can.
Lucie's father battles his way back from ...more
Yes, the last line is a classic ("It is a far, far better thing ..."), concluding, in astonishingly concise language (for Dickens), the peace and redemption of the story's most poignant romantic hero. But this novel delivers such a gratifying experience because there are, in fact, many characters who cover significant emotional ground in their journey to love one woman as best they can.
Lucie's father battles his way back from ...more
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Read in March, 2008
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Read in November, 2007
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 Def...more
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 Def...more
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Read in June, 2008
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 ...more
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Read in January, 2008
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Read in October, 2007
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...more
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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 u...more
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 u...more
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Admittedly, I'm not much of Dickens fan. Talk about getting a ton of mileage out of a bad childhood...BUT this book, to me, was riveting. One of the greatest opening lines in ANY novel, one of the greatest anti-heroes of all time, Sydney Carton, and one of the greatest villianesses of all time, Madame LeFarge. And, there have been excellent film adaptatations of this book which is not something I have said more than two or three times in my life. Also, 5 stars automatically to the author that pe...more
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Read in August, 2008
I'm not positive, but am pretty sure that Dickens was living in Venezuela for this past decade when he wrote the book. Apart from that, what memorable characters he created! Who can forget the "honest tradesman" with his spiky hair, rusty fingers, and "flopping" wife? Or dear, dry, dusty Mr. Lorry, still with a twinkle lurking in his eyes in spite of all the years tucked away in dry, dusty Tellons? And the question, "I hope you care to be recalled to life?" O.K.,...more
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Read in June, 2008
recommended to Jessica by:
the canon
Um. Wow. The last six chapters were especially amazing. I ride (and read on) the bus every day, and I don't think I've ever missed my stop - until today, deep into the conclusion of this tremendous work. I really like Dickens as a suspense writer. The whole book was very well done, but it was the second half that really did it for me. The way he portrayed the barbarism and perverted law of the French Revolution will stick with me; he made the Guillotine a character.
Plus, there is a woman nam...more
Plus, there is a woman nam...more
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Yeah, I know we all had to read Dickens when we were too young and it scarred us for life. Get over it. The guy had mad skills and this is his best (imo) work. Another of the books that I've read more than twice (4 times and counting). If you don't know the story then you have no idea what anyone is talking about when they mention Madame Defarge or Sidney Carton and that's a shame.
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Read in October, 2008
The book I read was called A Tale of Two Cities. It was written by Charles Dickens who has written stories such as Great Expectations, Oliver Twist, and David Copperfield. He was born in the 1800’s and bases most of his books on society’s failures such as poverty. This novel is about the French Revolution which was a time where France changed from a monarchy and aristocracy to a country with nationalism, citizenship, and inalienable rights. There is a complex love triangle of Charles Darnay,...more
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A Tale of Two Cities Review
A Tale of Two Cities is a classic novel that takes place at the time period of the French Revolution in the late eighteenth century. Charles Dickens, a British author who also wrote Oliver Twist and A Christmas Carol, had it published in 1859 at a time when the danger of social revolution seemed looming in England. In the novel, a collection of protagonists mostly including Lucie Manette, her family, and her friends face the horrors of the French Revolution and the ...more
A Tale of Two Cities is a classic novel that takes place at the time period of the French Revolution in the late eighteenth century. Charles Dickens, a British author who also wrote Oliver Twist and A Christmas Carol, had it published in 1859 at a time when the danger of social revolution seemed looming in England. In the novel, a collection of protagonists mostly including Lucie Manette, her family, and her friends face the horrors of the French Revolution and the ...more
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Read in October, 2008
***** 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...more
"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...more
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recommends it for:
those who know the book jacket descriptions are always misleading.
My first Dickens.... dicky dicky dicky.... I liked it....
I had been raised to loathe anything "dickeny," because that christmas tale gives me nausea... not for my yiddishness, but on my very own sentiment....
and the costumes in tv movies meant to move us to sentimental old worldishness are revolting... HOW BIG CAN YOUR SIDEBURNS GROW, SON. & WHAT IS THAT BILLYGOAT FLOORSCRAPER BENEATH YR CHIN. Dickensian facial apparati in the modern male is hard to behold, but I've come ...more
I had been raised to loathe anything "dickeny," because that christmas tale gives me nausea... not for my yiddishness, but on my very own sentiment....
and the costumes in tv movies meant to move us to sentimental old worldishness are revolting... HOW BIG CAN YOUR SIDEBURNS GROW, SON. & WHAT IS THAT BILLYGOAT FLOORSCRAPER BENEATH YR CHIN. Dickensian facial apparati in the modern male is hard to behold, but I've come ...more
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Read in June, 2008
recommended to Mister Jones by:
English Peoplerecommends it for: 11th Grade Summer Reading
A tough, but rewarding read.
Chances are very great I would have never read this classic if I wasn't going to teach it. Furthermore, I would have never assigned it to high school students, and I feel guilty for doing so.
It's Dickens, and the language, tone, and approach is acutely Victorian. All the sentimentality of the Victorians are there with Dr. Mannette and his daughter, Luce, as well as with Sidney Carton's own morose, fatalisitc, and subservient behavior. If you combine the aforem...more
Chances are very great I would have never read this classic if I wasn't going to teach it. Furthermore, I would have never assigned it to high school students, and I feel guilty for doing so.
It's Dickens, and the language, tone, and approach is acutely Victorian. All the sentimentality of the Victorians are there with Dr. Mannette and his daughter, Luce, as well as with Sidney Carton's own morose, fatalisitc, and subservient behavior. If you combine the aforem...more
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Read in May, 2008
Ryan: This book took me by surprise. The book cover offered no summary, so I approached it naively and blindly. I didn't expect a historical fiction of the French Revolution. But I loved it.
The story was rich in history and in the sentiment of the times, which was very anti-aristocrat or anti-individual. The Party came first, people greeted each other with a cordial "Good Day Citizen," and if you weren't careful about your actions you could be denounced and end up beheaded by that ...more
The story was rich in history and in the sentiment of the times, which was very anti-aristocrat or anti-individual. The Party came first, people greeted each other with a cordial "Good Day Citizen," and if you weren't careful about your actions you could be denounced and end up beheaded by that ...more
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bookshelves:
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britlit,
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Read in March, 2007
A magnificent piece of literature, and a brilliant historical novel, with intricacies of plot and symbolism that fired my imagination and kept me going from one chapter to the next. This classic book features recurrent themes of blood/wine, rebirth/resurrection, violence/cruelty, and imprisonment/sacrifice as we follow the characters from late 19th-century London to the madness (and the guillotine!) of revolutionary Paris. Dickens’ heavy narrative style bogged me down at times. On more than...more
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Read in February, 2008
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Read in October, 2007
recommended to Erin by:
Dad
I have learned SO much about the French revolution through reading this. It has given me totally new perspective on government and the lack of it. I just never truly realized that the French revolution was so horrible. I always thought it needed to happen and that Marie Antoinette and the King and the aristocracy needed to go. I never knew how blood hungry these peasants were. Dickens doesn't have one good word to say about those involved in the Revolution; yet he doesn't truly blame them e...more



















