19th Century Epic Romances discussion

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A Tale of Two Cities
A Tale of Two Cities-Jan. 2015
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Part 1- Chapters 1-3
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message 1:
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Angela
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rated it 5 stars
Dec 29, 2014 10:55AM

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I know I will be exposing my ignorance, but I never realized that "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.." and "It is a far, far better thing that I do..." quotes came from this book!



(I also should say, this is my second time reading it, but the first was so long ago and I think I understand it less then!)



The first chapter was a slog and the rather constant endnote asterisks in my edition made it even more like a lesson instead of a read.
I'm not sure I'll stay the course. I'm not sure I'm in a full Dickens mood. But I'm glad to know the consensus is that it's a rough start. Some books just are. It's challenging to lay out the opening setting and at the same time keep your readers engaged.
message 9:
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Terry ~ Huntress of Erudition
(last edited Jan 30, 2015 06:40PM)
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I felt as if I was working on an assignment and had a goal to achieve, rather than reading for pleasure and enlightenment.



I also had a hard time at the start and went to sparknotes to get me through the first few chapters. That was humbling, since I'm an English lit major and a big James Joyce fan, and I felt a bit dim.
But once I got into it, it's pure poetry like the third chapter mentioned here. I could hardly believe it was the same author who wrote Copperfield and Great Expectations, both of which bored me nearly to tears. I loved Pickwick Papers though and I'm glad I didn't give up on Dickens and went for this.
I've read that Dickens understood the French people's complaints in rising up against their masters, but that he was critical of the violence. Since I believe that not all revolutions can be peaceful, his bias has got me a bit worried but I'm sure it won't dampen my enjoyment of this novel too much.


But Dickens at his worst is better than most contemporary writers at their best.
Shelley
http://dustbowlstory.wordpress.com