The Old Curiosity Club discussion
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Mary Lou
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Oct 27, 2019 04:38AM

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I've really enjoyed reading past comments. I think people were a bit mean to the character Barnaby, but I'm over it now. Looking forward to more commentary ... never read most of the books ahead of us, and I'm happy for that I think. Anticipating a lot of fun. Thanks for the group!

Welcome John!
And I hope that being a bit mean to fictional characters helps us being less mean to real people, since we got the gall out of our system ;-)
And I hope that being a bit mean to fictional characters helps us being less mean to real people, since we got the gall out of our system ;-)

I just commented in the Barnaby wrap-up ... thank you, Jantine. Your response made me think more clearly about it.
My protest for better treatment of Barnaby wasn't really about the actual character. I just thought he was a brilliant symbol of what Dickens was trying to say.

Hello John,
A hearty welcome to our group, and please feel free to join our discussions! If you think we were mean to Barnaby, you should take a look at the Old Curiosity Shop discussions and see our discussion about Little Nell ;-)
A hearty welcome to our group, and please feel free to join our discussions! If you think we were mean to Barnaby, you should take a look at the Old Curiosity Shop discussions and see our discussion about Little Nell ;-)

I am hoping to read more and make some new friends here on goodreads.com. I'm currently reading Middlemarch and hope to be ready to join a group read some time around the end of February. I see you will be reading Dombey and Son then; one I've always liked the sound of. I have not read much Dickens, only Great Expectations, I think, which I did enjoy a great deal. I like 19th Century literature more with each novel I read. I live near Cambridge, UK.

Hello Scott.
Great to have you aboard. Dombey and Son is a great read. We hope you enjoy our discussions.
Great to have you aboard. Dombey and Son is a great read. We hope you enjoy our discussions.

I didn't know it was there, but it seems it's a very short walk from King's Cross which I pass through from time to time. I'm sure I will visit this year. Thank you. :)
Welcome to the Old Curiosity Club, Scott! You picked a good time to join because some of us, and I'd include myself, think that Dombey and Son is one of Dickens's best, albeit under-appreciated novels, and I am looking forward to discovering its many merits with the group.
By the way, it's been a long time I last visited the Dickens House, but I'd love to go there again, perhaps taking my children, because it was really great to get so much insight into Dickens's life in a place he actually spent so much time in. I'd also recommend a visit to Gad's Hill, preferably at the time of the Dickens Festival in Rochester.
By the way, it's been a long time I last visited the Dickens House, but I'd love to go there again, perhaps taking my children, because it was really great to get so much insight into Dickens's life in a place he actually spent so much time in. I'd also recommend a visit to Gad's Hill, preferably at the time of the Dickens Festival in Rochester.

Welcome Scott, it's nice to meet you. And I agree with Tristram (once in awhile) Dombey is a great time to join us, it's one of my favorites too. Now I've agreed with him again, it's late, I must be tired. Again, welcome. :-)


As an aside, I have read Silas Marner and something I remember being pleasantly surprised by was the way Eliot captured the speech and turns of phrase of the more common characters in the story. These particular manners of speech and sayings people have, or the way Eliot spells words to convey how they were said, are there in Middlemarch too. It's how my father talks, and my aunties and uncles, and especially my grandmother. Eliot clearly knew well the vein of English peoples my family is mined from. I'll always be fond of her writing for that reason alone, let alone that she's a wonderful writer of good stories; the pages of her books contain where I'm from, not in a directly remembered past but in the people and places that shaped the people who shaped the people who shaped me - the common ones, that is! :)
I've written too much and don't have time to make it shorter now.. ;) Good night!

I was hooked straightaway and have gone through Great Expectations and Pickwick Papers since. I'm planning to read them in order (just started Oliver Twist last night).
Apart from Dickens I read mainly crime thrillers (sorry), but also things like Idaho.
Looking forward to "meeting" some of you.
Hello David,
Welcome to the Old Curiosities! If you like joining or just following animated discussions on Charles Dickens's novels, this is a good place for you to be. We read Dickens's novels in their order of publication and in between these long texts we deal with shorter fiction by Dickens. In December, we usually read one of the Inimitable's Christmas stories. Right now, we are in the middle of Dombey and Son, which means that in summer, we will start with David Copperfield. We normally go by the instalments in which the novels were originally published, but, of course, we do monthly instalments as weekly readings because otherwise it would simply take too long.
If you want to join our discussions, feel welcome! If you just want to chat, we have a thread for that - it is always named after one of the pubs or inn featuring in the novel we are reading -, but even in our discussion threads, we often talk about things only loosely associated with the chapters in question. I think there has never been a thread, where our moderator Kim did not call me a grump sooner or later ;-)
Enjoy!
Welcome to the Old Curiosities! If you like joining or just following animated discussions on Charles Dickens's novels, this is a good place for you to be. We read Dickens's novels in their order of publication and in between these long texts we deal with shorter fiction by Dickens. In December, we usually read one of the Inimitable's Christmas stories. Right now, we are in the middle of Dombey and Son, which means that in summer, we will start with David Copperfield. We normally go by the instalments in which the novels were originally published, but, of course, we do monthly instalments as weekly readings because otherwise it would simply take too long.
If you want to join our discussions, feel welcome! If you just want to chat, we have a thread for that - it is always named after one of the pubs or inn featuring in the novel we are reading -, but even in our discussion threads, we often talk about things only loosely associated with the chapters in question. I think there has never been a thread, where our moderator Kim did not call me a grump sooner or later ;-)
Enjoy!
Welcome David
Find yourself a comfortable chair and join us in our readings and general discussions.
You can’t go wrong reading Dickens.
Find yourself a comfortable chair and join us in our readings and general discussions.
You can’t go wrong reading Dickens.
Welcome David, it's nice to meet you! I see you had the very normal good sense to fall in love with Dickens just from reading The Old Curiosity Shop. I only know one person who doesn't absolutely love Little Nell and break down in tears every time we read about her death, but he's always been a grump. :-) Just jump in any time David, you're always welcome.
Now I have to go search through all our old threads to see if perhaps there's a slight chance there's one Tristram wasn't a grump in it.
Welcome David! Good to see there are more people converted to Dickensianism ;-)

Being given stuff to think about as I progress through the books is making it much more rewarding - I was missing so much.
See you in the Dombey thread soon...
David wrote: "I am loving this place ! I had just finished Pickwick Papers and was going on to Oliver Twist, but now I've jumped to Dombey & Son and will be up with you guys in a week or so.
Being given stuff to..."
David
Great stuff. We’ll be seeing - well, actually reading - you soon.
Being given stuff to..."
David
Great stuff. We’ll be seeing - well, actually reading - you soon.

Being given stuff to..."
Welcome, David. I'm so glad you've discovered Dickens and our little group. I'm taking a break from Dombey, but looking forward to discussing Great Expectations with you when we start that one. Even if you don't read it again, it should be fresh enough in your mind to jump in to the discussion.

Even if you take a break from our present read, please don't forget to look in at our local pub from time to time! I'd love to know how you are faring!

I'm Ulysse, very nice to meet you. I live in France in a small village surrounded by the most beautiful trees you'll ever see (we moved here from Paris last month). I am however not French. I grew up in a suburb of Vancouver, BC. My father is Belgian and my mother is Portuguese and I spent a good part of my childhood in a country that used to be called Zaïre and is now called the Democratic Republic of Congo. I'm still trying to figure out where I'm from.
I make a living teaching English but I live for music (I'm a singer-songwriter) and literature.
I first "discovered" Dickens in the Summer of 2003. That Summer I read Expectations, Curiosity, Pickwick and Dombey all in a row and thought ok one more. After a few chapters of Chuzzlewit I felt like I was starting to lose my mind.
Since then I haven't really been able to enjoy Dickens as much as I did in my more innocent days. I'm hoping that by joining this group my passion for all things Dickens will rekindle with renewed ardor. I'm certainly looking forward to sharing thoughts and impressions with you all.

Ulysse wrote: "Hello everyone, I found my way here thanks to Tristram's kind invitation. I'm very excited to join ranks with you and embark on a journey to the land of middle-Dickens.
I'm Ulysse, very nice to m..."
Welcome Ulysse
No, you are not losing your mind. Many people find Chuzzlewit sadly lacking. I certainly do.
We lived in Victoria BC before moving back to Toronto to become part time babysitting grandparents. We have much in common. My wife is Portuguese and if I’m not reading Dickens I’m playing and listening to The Blues, especially Chicago Blues.
I hope you enjoy our group. Welcome aboard.
I'm Ulysse, very nice to m..."
Welcome Ulysse
No, you are not losing your mind. Many people find Chuzzlewit sadly lacking. I certainly do.
We lived in Victoria BC before moving back to Toronto to become part time babysitting grandparents. We have much in common. My wife is Portuguese and if I’m not reading Dickens I’m playing and listening to The Blues, especially Chicago Blues.
I hope you enjoy our group. Welcome aboard.


I've been enjoying Dombey since, and look forward to reading further with you!

Thanks David!

I'm Ulysse,..."
Hi Peter, looks like we might have been neighbours at some point. I grew up across the water in a quaint seaside town called Crescent Beach. Perhaps you've been there?
Chuzzlewit wasn't so much a problem as the fact of having ingurgitated such a vast amount of Dickens in the span of one Summer. I like this group's idea of reading Dickens, by monthly instalments, which was the way his first readers discovered his wonderful books.

Hi Julie, Belligham's a lovely town. I used to go there a lot when I was a teenager. Last time was in 2009. Glad you were able to make it all the way to Dombey!

Thank you Mary Lou! I have a lot of memories of Kinshasa, some good, some not so good. I bet the city has changed a lot since the 1980's. Must have been an eye-opening experience for your daughter.
Welcome, Ulysse! I hope you will enjoy Dickens again when you read it at a slower pace with us :-D There is so much to enjoy! And the slower pace makes it a bit easier to read other things in between too.

I have a great interest in France but will probably never make it there. Two of my sons have been there as teens and we had 2 teen boys as exchange students years ago. That was such a great experience. My son has 2 books translated into French and made several trips there promoting. But my great reading interest is in the British Isles, hence Dickens.
Glad to have you in the group.
Hi Ulysse,
I am glad to find you have followed my hint ;-) I hope you are going to enjoy our weekly discussions, which go at such a leisurely pace that you can read lots of other books at the same time.
I am glad to find you have followed my hint ;-) I hope you are going to enjoy our weekly discussions, which go at such a leisurely pace that you can read lots of other books at the same time.

Hello Jantine, I think reading Dickens at a slower pace will be the perfect cure for a Dickens hangover.

Hello Bobbie, I'm sorry to hear that you'll never make it to this beautiful country. Travelling has become a risky undertaking like it was 200 years ago. Maybe the planet will be all the better for it? Anyway, a true reader knows that the easiest (and best) way to travel is to open a book and start reading. On the wings of thought can we go to any place or any time period we like. Who needs a time machine when we've got writers like Dickens, right?

I am glad to find you have followed my hint ;-) I hope you are going to enjoy our weekly discussions, which go at such a leisurely pace that you can read lots of other books at the same..."
Thanks again for the invite, Tristram. This is my first ever club. It's exciting!
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)