'Great Expectations' by Charles Dickens



In what may be Dickens's best novel, humble, orphaned Pip is apprenticed to the dirty work of the forge but dares to dream of becoming a gentleman — and one day, under sudden and enigmatic circumstances, he finds himself in possession of "great expectations." In this gripping tale of crime and guilt, revenge and reward, the compelling characters include Magwitch, the fearful and fearsome convict; Estella, whose beauty is excelled only by her haughtiness; and the embittered Miss Havisham, an eccentric jilted bride.

MY THOUGHTS:
This is one of my favourite Dickens tales, and coming of age stories. There's so much to say about the main character Pip, I'll be sharing a separate post soon just to ramble on about him. For a lot of book, he isn't actually a snob, yet he is a wannabe snob, which is a step in that direction. But more on that later. For now, I'll start with a quick summary.

As a small boy, Pip has forced encounters with a couple of scary people. He's frightened by an escaped convict on the bleak marshes, who demands food and a file for his chains, or threatens dire peril. Pip is also enlisted as a sort of companion to eccentric recluse Miss Havisham and her adopted daughter Estella. He's supposed to 'play' there, whatever that's meant to mean. He grows up longing for a lucky break where he's in charge of his own destiny, and one day in his late teens, a mysterious benefactor offers him the chance to begin anew as a fashionable gentleman in London. One of the only conditions is that Pip makes no attempt to discover their identity. Happy not to look a gift horse in the mouth, our hero sets off to where the action is.

Pip's such a great character, but they're all described in a  way that makes them live and breathe through the pages. Miss Havisham first strikes Pip as a person who might disintegrate to dust if she's exposed to daylight, like some sort of mummified freak, so that's how we picture her from then on. There's Jaggers, the intimidating lawyer, and his reliable clerk Wemmick, who has a completely different persona at home to the one he adopts at work. And always in the back of Pip's mind is the haughty and beautiful Estella, who he'd give anything in the world to impress. There are also excellent cameo characters like Trabb's boy, who works for the haberdasherer. What a legend!

The story is intriguing for the historical and cultural insights it gives us. I love how Pip and his best friend Herbert get along together. My eldest son and his friends are a similar age to them, so it's fun to see their counterparts in the 1800s, going out to the theatre, trying to manage their finances, and cooking their Victorian dude food. (I've included these lads from Great Expectations on my list of best bromances.)

I can see that if I'd lived back then, following the installments in the magazine, I would have been amazed and astounded by the sudden revelations and all the irony and action. It's the type of story that prompts us to examine where our allegiances lie, and to question where they should lie. Some stories are obviously better being told in first person, despite the limitations of time and place, and this is one of them. I'm glad Dickens opted to have Pip telling his own story, because it's an unforgettable ride.

5 stars
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Published on July 02, 2017 12:00
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message 1: by Jeanette (new)

Jeanette Grant-Thomson I've always liked Great Expectations too, Paula. Thanks - I enjoyed your review.


message 2: by Paula (new)

Paula Vince Jeanette wrote: "I've always liked Great Expectations too, Paula. Thanks - I enjoyed your review."
Thanks, Jeanette. It's one of my favourite Dickens, although I haven't read them all by a long shot.


message 3: by Jeanette (new)

Jeanette Grant-Thomson I've only read about three or four. I'm planning to read the unabridged version of David Copperfield for the Reading Challenge as a book with more then 800 pages.


message 4: by Paula (new)

Paula Vince Jeanette wrote: "I've only read about three or four. I'm planning to read the unabridged version of David Copperfield for the Reading Challenge as a book with more then 800 pages."
Wow, give yourself a few weeks. I read The Pickwick Papers earlier this year, and wouldn't mind reading more in the near future :)


message 5: by Jeanette (new)

Jeanette Grant-Thomson I haven't read that. I'd be keen to hear how you like it. Re David Copperfield, my edition has 950 pages! yes, a few weeks.


message 6: by Paula (new)

Paula Vince Jeanette wrote: "I haven't read that. I'd be keen to hear how you like it. Re David Copperfield, my edition has 950 pages! yes, a few weeks."

I'm often awed by the thought of Dickens' sitting there and writing so many 800+ page novels by lamplight with no computer.


message 7: by Jeanette (new)

Jeanette Grant-Thomson Oh yes - me too for all those 'old' writers. I wrote my first few books hand writing them before I learnt to type. My sister typed them on her computer. Now I type it is SO much easier. Imagine if you couldn't insert or delete! You have to hand it to them. Did you start on computer or what?


message 8: by Paula (new)

Paula Vince Jeanette wrote: "Oh yes - me too for all those 'old' writers. I wrote my first few books hand writing them before I learnt to type. My sister typed them on her computer. Now I type it is SO much easier. Imagine if ..."
Back in the 80s when I was a teenager, I used to write them by hand too, and then face the colossal job of typing them with an electric typewriter, for household computers were still a thing of the future :) I find it hard to imagine those days now.


message 9: by Jeanette (new)

Jeanette Grant-Thomson Yes, we've 'got it good' now. You must have been busy!


message 10: by Paula (new)

Paula Vince Jeanette wrote: "Yes, we've 'got it good' now. You must have been busy!"
Doing a Uni degree from 1988 to 1991 just with an electric typewriter and no computer at home boggles my mind now. How about you?


message 11: by Jeanette (new)

Jeanette Grant-Thomson Paula, I was at uni doing a three year degree in 1965-7! We had to take notes by hand while the lecturers spoke at a normal speaking rate! My hand writing became nearly illegible (still is). We submitted hand written assignments. And we never gave it a thought really. Phew! I am SO glad I gave in (against my feelings) and more-or-less conquered the computer these last years.


message 12: by Paula (new)

Paula Vince Jeanette wrote: "Paula, I was at uni doing a three year degree in 1965-7! We had to take notes by hand while the lecturers spoke at a normal speaking rate! My hand writing became nearly illegible (still is). We sub..."

Wow, I love stories like this, about such major changes within relatively short periods of time. When my kids, who are in their teens, hear about the pre-computer days, they really think it sounds like a dinosaur era :) My parents never, ever gave in and conquered the computer at all.


message 13: by Jeanette (new)

Jeanette Grant-Thomson I understand how your parents felt. I used to feel nauseous at the thought of learning computer but one day I woke up and felt I wanted to do it. I've been SO glad. It's fun - when it's not being difficult!
You must have been young when you started writing books. I mainly only wrote short pieces (lots of them ) until my early forties when I wrote my first book.


message 14: by Paula (new)

Paula Vince Jeanette wrote: "I understand how your parents felt. I used to feel nauseous at the thought of learning computer but one day I woke up and felt I wanted to do it. I've been SO glad. It's fun - when it's not being d..."
Picking up the Pieces was the first novel I had published, and I was about 28 :) Even when I proofread the old edition for a reprint once, I found I had to update a lot of technology, which had changed in just ten years or so.


message 15: by Jeanette (new)

Jeanette Grant-Thomson Wow! You did well. Yes, If find so much has changed too. I wrote Jodie's Story (true story) when I was in my early forties, and even though it is her true story and it is still selling now, I don't think it would be published now with her attitudes being so 'not politically correct'. Things have changed so much. Tech and social values. Everything. I read Picking up the Pieces - for someone so young, you did a terrific job. Congratulations!


message 16: by Paula (new)

Paula Vince Jeanette wrote: "Wow! You did well. Yes, If find so much has changed too. I wrote Jodie's Story (true story) when I was in my early forties, and even though it is her true story and it is still selling now, I don't..."
Thanks very much, Jeanette :) I'm so happy to hear you enjoyed it. In turn, I read Jodie's Story, and also Mirage, a long time ago, probably back when they were published :) I found both very convicting, and they stayed in my mind for a long time afterward. And as you say, things have changed so much since the 90s, and even far more recently.


message 17: by Jeanette (new)

Jeanette Grant-Thomson Thanks Paula. So I guess we learn to adapt our characters' attitudes as well as our style, to suit the times we live in. We'll have to be careful not to compromise the truth in all that. You, like me, have tackled big issues (good for you!) - people so need to hear the truth about these things.


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The Vince Review

Paula Vince
Author, blogger, reader, reviewer, mother of three. All this goes under the mantle of 'stay at home mum'. I also love walking and cooking when the mood strikes me. Getting stuck into a good book has a ...more
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