The Old Curiosity Club discussion
General Discussion
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Please Introduce Yourself

Thank you Débora! I totally agree with you.
Welcome Alana!

Dodgy internet at the moment, but I hope to get to know all our new fellow Dickens enthusiasts when I jump into the The Mystery of Edwin Drood read, which unfortunately will be a little delayed.
A hearty welcome to Svalberd, Milena and Alana from Germany! It always comes as a relief to me to find myself not the only member who is not from the UK, Ireland, the US, or Canada. This shows me that Dickens is well-known all over the world and that being crazy about Dickens is being cosmopolitan ;-)
I'm looking forward to our discussions here!
I'm looking forward to our discussions here!


I wont be joining you for Drood. Doing exams at present - Honours year for BA (English Lit). But am looking forward to joining you for for "The Haunted Man"

Glad to have you with us, Cordelia. Looking forward to spending the holidays with you!

Hi Cordelia,
Welcome to the Curiosity Club! We are looking forward to your joining our lively discussions!
Welcome to the Curiosity Club! We are looking forward to your joining our lively discussions!
Hello from Canada
We have members from all over the world. I look forward to your comments.
And good for you to be a life-long learner.
We have members from all over the world. I look forward to your comments.
And good for you to be a life-long learner.
Hannah wrote: "Hello!
I am new to your group and relatively new to the Dicken's fan club in general. I first read Dickens for a college class about a year ago and have been able to read nothing else since!
I ..."
Hannah
Welcome. Perfect timing to join us as we will shortly begin our Christmas read.
We look forward to a great discussion.
I am new to your group and relatively new to the Dicken's fan club in general. I first read Dickens for a college class about a year ago and have been able to read nothing else since!
I ..."
Hannah
Welcome. Perfect timing to join us as we will shortly begin our Christmas read.
We look forward to a great discussion.
Welcome, Hannah,
As Peter said, it is a perfect moment to join this club, not only because we'll start our Christmas read soon, but also because in January, we are going to start our chronological reading of Dickens's novels from the very beginning again, i.e. with Pickwick Papers.
We never read the books at a very swift pace so that even if you happen to fall back for whatever reason, you'll have a fair chance to catch up with the group. Reading Dickens slowly and with a view to detail has proved a valuable experience to me, and I hope you are going to enjoy discussions here and feel invited to join in with your own ideas.
As Peter said, it is a perfect moment to join this club, not only because we'll start our Christmas read soon, but also because in January, we are going to start our chronological reading of Dickens's novels from the very beginning again, i.e. with Pickwick Papers.
We never read the books at a very swift pace so that even if you happen to fall back for whatever reason, you'll have a fair chance to catch up with the group. Reading Dickens slowly and with a view to detail has proved a valuable experience to me, and I hope you are going to enjoy discussions here and feel invited to join in with your own ideas.

If I had to pick a favorite Dickens novel it's probably Tale of Two Cities. If I had to pick a least favorite... well, I admit there's one I couldn't get through, but maybe I'll wait to know you better before finishing up with that confession. I haven't read Nicholas Nickelby, Dombey and Son, Little Dorrit, or Edwin Drood at all, and I haven't read Haunted Man, so I'm looking forward to starting that with you. I was lucky enough to spend a fair amount of research time one year browsing through issues of Household Words. I guess what I like most about CD's books is the richness of the language and imagery. Every time I pick one up again I feel a little shock at how good it is. Every time I forget.
I live with my ethnobotanist husband and two sons, ages 17 and 7, and a very forgiving Welsh corgi.
Welcome Julie! It is nice to meet you. :-) I love corgis, they are just the cutest little things. Of course I love all dogs, but cocker spaniels are on the top of my list.


Thanks! I worked three years at a vet clinic in high school and met a lot of cocker spaniels and can't recall ever being bitten by one, even when I'm sure they felt I deserved it. They are very sweet dogs.

Yes! Dickens has become so famous as a character himself that it's easy to forget he earned it as a writer first.
Not all of mine have been sweet. Sweet toward other people that is. My first was pleasant enough until certain little kids were around who seemed to find it amusing to jump on her or kick her. I did not find it amusing and find myself getting mad all over again even though it's 15 years later. :-) After awhile of that she could no longer tolerate kids, which became very uncomfortable at times. Our next was an absolutely wonderful dog who loved me more than any other person (or dog) ever loved me. The key word in that sentence is me, she tolerated a few other people and hated the rest. Big, little, any size she wanted nothing to do with them and made it clear. Regardless, I still miss her. Now we have another black cocker and she loves everybody. Especially children - a complete opposite of the last two - she is always excited to see people come and hates when they leave. She is sweet, the first two were wonderful, but only for me. I'll still never own any dog but a cocker.

I love a lot of dogs, but this is how I feel about corgis. You know when you've found your breed.

In January we begin our second time reading through all "the Inimitable"'s novels, very slowly, just two or three chapters a week. So you wouldn't think we would be likely to forget the quality of his writing really. And yet each time I am stunned by his ability to make me laugh, and then sometimes immediately afterwards to make me cry ... But I'm sure Tristram and Kim will say more about how things are organised here :)
Oh, and mine's a border collie LOL!
Welcome Julie.
Alas, I do not have a pet since we live in an apartment.
I completely agree with you about the power of Dickens. There is nothing quite like him. As a side note, if we could have a dog now it would be a Standard Poodle. No shedding. I was once owned by an Old English Sheepdog whose name was - and what else would it have been - Dickens.
Please join us with our Christmas read of The Haunted Man and The Ghost’s Bargain. I will have the pleasure of moderating that novella in December and will look forward to your comments.
You are right about living near other members of the Curiosities. I live in Victoria as does Vanessa. Linda lives in Seattle and Everyman is on San Juan Island. With you with us now we have quite a diverse and interesting group.
What larks!
Alas, I do not have a pet since we live in an apartment.
I completely agree with you about the power of Dickens. There is nothing quite like him. As a side note, if we could have a dog now it would be a Standard Poodle. No shedding. I was once owned by an Old English Sheepdog whose name was - and what else would it have been - Dickens.
Please join us with our Christmas read of The Haunted Man and The Ghost’s Bargain. I will have the pleasure of moderating that novella in December and will look forward to your comments.
You are right about living near other members of the Curiosities. I live in Victoria as does Vanessa. Linda lives in Seattle and Everyman is on San Juan Island. With you with us now we have quite a diverse and interesting group.
What larks!

I didn't realize I was going to get to talk dogs as well as Dickens here. Clearly I've landed on my feet.
Peter, thank you for the invite to the Christmas read and I'm very much looking forward to it!




Neither had I Julie! I feel quite outnumbered here (I currently live just down the road from "The Maypole" inn where most of Barnaby Rudge is focused) but I do love the different slants on everything :)
Julie wrote: "Hi, I'm Julie, and I live in Bellingham, WA--not far from some of you, I gather. I've been teaching literature at the college level for two decades now, including Dickens. One of the things that in..."
Welcome to the group. Look forward to your comments as we work through Charlie. :)
I happen to be in Bellingham at the moment recovering from some medical issues, but am hoping to get back home to San Juan Island soon.
Welcome to the group. Look forward to your comments as we work through Charlie. :)
I happen to be in Bellingham at the moment recovering from some medical issues, but am hoping to get back home to San Juan Island soon.


You know we're all rooting for you, Everyman :)
Hello Julie,
Welcome to the Old Curiosity Club! I am one of the very few non-English-as-a-native-language-speaking members and really enjoy having found so many people here who love Dickens as much as I do. Not even among my English teaching colleagues are there any who enjoy reading Dickens, let alone discussing his novels.
I am looking forward to your joining us in our yearly Christmas read. You could not have come at a better time, really.
Welcome to the Old Curiosity Club! I am one of the very few non-English-as-a-native-language-speaking members and really enjoy having found so many people here who love Dickens as much as I do. Not even among my English teaching colleagues are there any who enjoy reading Dickens, let alone discussing his novels.
I am looking forward to your joining us in our yearly Christmas read. You could not have come at a better time, really.
Jean wrote: "Julie - I surely have been onsite for Charlie ("Charlie?" Everyman? LOL! Kim, researcher supreme, is there any evidence for this moniker?) for a few decades now. Oddly enough though I hope to move ..."
I have been told by the internet many times now that Charles Dickens had a son they called Charley who even had the middle name of Boz, and a whole bunch of stuff about Charles Dickens mentioning this son of his and just about everything else you would ever want to know about him. As to a nickname the only thing I found was Boz, which Dickens adopted from the nickname "Moses", a name he had given to his youngest brother Augustus Dickens, after a character in Oliver Goldsmith's The Vicar of Wakefield. When pronounced by anyone with a head cold, "Moses" became "Boses"—later shortened to Boz.
Oh, except Everyman, he calls him Charlie.
I have been told by the internet many times now that Charles Dickens had a son they called Charley who even had the middle name of Boz, and a whole bunch of stuff about Charles Dickens mentioning this son of his and just about everything else you would ever want to know about him. As to a nickname the only thing I found was Boz, which Dickens adopted from the nickname "Moses", a name he had given to his youngest brother Augustus Dickens, after a character in Oliver Goldsmith's The Vicar of Wakefield. When pronounced by anyone with a head cold, "Moses" became "Boses"—later shortened to Boz.
Oh, except Everyman, he calls him Charlie.

(I loved to read all your conversations about dogs!)

My breed seems to be boxers - I feel disloyal to my other dogs (3 mixed breeds and a yorkie) but my three boxers have been my favorites. They're such clowns. Despite that, I'm hoping my next will be an English bulldog, if I can find one that needs rescuing.
Re: Kim's comment -- is Boz, then, pronounced Bahz or Bohz with a long O? I always thought it was the former. I hate to think I've been saying it wrong. Speaking of which, I watched one of the adaptations of Our Mutual Friend a few weeks ago, and in the commentary they talked about the Lammles. It jarred me when they pronounced the name "LAM-leez" when all this time, I've been saying "LAM-elz"! But what's really funny is that I thought to myself that I must be right, because all of you said it the same way! It took several minutes to dawn on me that I'd never heard any of you actually say the name, but that I have been reading your comments in my own voice. :-) So I'm curious now to know how all of you really do pronounce it.
(And while I'm at it, is the English town in the Cotsworlds pronounced BYbury or BIHbury [or some other way]? Inquiring minds want to know!)
Welcome to the group, Julie! Be prepared for lots of stimulating tangents like this one. ;-)

Yes, Lamm-ells. I'm listening to the 10 hour audio dramatisation at the moment, and also have the most recent DVD, so will let you know if they do say it differently!
I don't know about Boz, I'll try to find it if I remember so you have at least a little tiny chance I'll find it. :-)
Re: Kim's comment -- is Boz, then, pronounced Bahz or Bohz with a long O?
Life of Charles Dickens
Commentary:
Boz [boz]: Boz was a very familiar word to me, long before I was an author, and so I came to adopt it.
Charles Dickens
That's Dickens speaking to his friend and biographer John Forster. His Life of Charles Dickens (published shortly after Dickens' death) tried to answer the public's innumerable questions about the man who had dominated their literary world. And one of their top queries: how did Dickens adopt the pen name Boz? They had, after all, first been introduced to Dickens through "Boz". His first stories and serialized novels, from The Pickwick Papers to Martin Chuzzlewit, were marked as either authored or edited "By Boz' - never by Charles Dickens. If this was a strategy by Dickens to surround his first stories in an aura of whimsy and mystery, then the strategy succeeded phenomenally.
But why Boz? Dickens told Forster that it originated with Moses, once a pet name for his younger brother Augustus. But since Augustus "facetiously" pronounced Moses through his nose, Moses became "Boses, and being shortened became "Boz" (pronounced with a long o, as in nose). The name stuck, Dickens borrowed it, and he wisely never told his readers that they were (and we still are) pronouncing it wrong.
From What the Dickens?!: Distinctly Dickensian Words and How to Use Them by Bryan Kozlowski
Life of Charles Dickens
Commentary:
Boz [boz]: Boz was a very familiar word to me, long before I was an author, and so I came to adopt it.
Charles Dickens
That's Dickens speaking to his friend and biographer John Forster. His Life of Charles Dickens (published shortly after Dickens' death) tried to answer the public's innumerable questions about the man who had dominated their literary world. And one of their top queries: how did Dickens adopt the pen name Boz? They had, after all, first been introduced to Dickens through "Boz". His first stories and serialized novels, from The Pickwick Papers to Martin Chuzzlewit, were marked as either authored or edited "By Boz' - never by Charles Dickens. If this was a strategy by Dickens to surround his first stories in an aura of whimsy and mystery, then the strategy succeeded phenomenally.
But why Boz? Dickens told Forster that it originated with Moses, once a pet name for his younger brother Augustus. But since Augustus "facetiously" pronounced Moses through his nose, Moses became "Boses, and being shortened became "Boz" (pronounced with a long o, as in nose). The name stuck, Dickens borrowed it, and he wisely never told his readers that they were (and we still are) pronouncing it wrong.
From What the Dickens?!: Distinctly Dickensian Words and How to Use Them by Bryan Kozlowski
Books mentioned in this topic
A Christmas Carol (other topics)A Christmas Carol (other topics)
The Pickwick Papers (other topics)
The Pickwick Papers (other topics)
Bleak House (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Charles Dickens (other topics)Bryan Kozlowski (other topics)
Thomas Hardy (other topics)
Thomas Hardy (other topics)
Welcome. Please join us as we read MED. It promises to be a great novel.