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The Count of Monte Cristo
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June and July Book - The Count of Monte Cristo
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Christa VG
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Jun 06, 2012 10:09AM

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This book is awesome! I'm so amazed with Alexandre Dumas's capability, how he describes every scene, every moment in this book. This' such a complicated story.
It's about Edmont Dantes's revenge (which is a strong character in this book). The plot doesn't make any confusion, but instead gave the tension and sense of wonder at the same time. It's interesting!


I agree to the selection of the word 'chancy' is.
Dantes is a complex figure. With high confidence, the plan which conceived as perfect as possible, he could be like a god who comes to judge.
Remember a qoute :
“How did I escape? With difficulty. How did I plan this moment? With pleasure.”

He had nothing left to live for but his revenge, and had no problem taking his own sweet time to plan all the details.
He also seems to have an uncanny ability to read people and predict what they are going to do. I guess that skill is necessary in order to survive prison.



I love the emotion in Drumas's writing, everything comes through so clearly.



The movie was a completely different story lol. Still a good movie though. :-)



I read an abridged version of the Count of Monte Cristo last year but according to my brother abridging this work takes a lot of great moments out of the book. I'll definitely read the unabridged version for June.





Just Google it. It was an actual prison(no longer used) and is now a tourist attraction. They even have cell the show as the one the fictional character Dantes might have been imprisoned. I think Chateau D'If is kind of the French version of Alcatraz.

I don't really see a point to including it in the story but havn't finished the book yet. I was just suprised by the reference. Come to think of it though I think drug use was common and not illegal then. I know opium was being traded freely at that time and Absinthe was popular with Romantic writers.

The Talmud states that revenge is best served by living a good and successful life

Just Google it. It was an actual..."
I don't have to Google it; I believe you :D


And i have always thought when i seen the Chateau D'lf in the movie,wow that's just to be real...and then of course my next thought was oh no ...you poor people to spend your days in that place :( .. must of been horrible for them..

I read that Alexandre Dumas, after making a lot of money writing, built his own "Monte Cristo Palace". idk where it is though. I think he eventually lost the place though. He was a drunkard and spent all his riches foolishly on women and all the pleasures of life. Ironically, a similar fate that one of the characters in the Count of Monte Cristo suffers. I will not spoil it and say who though.

lol. now that I think of it, I forgot the character's name.


That's a good question. I'd like to know too. I'm not very good with history either.

Totally agree with you, Brenda!
At the end of the book, there's something I catched from Edmond that he doesn't achieve the true satisfaction. From every plan and every vengeance that he set, and what his enemies received, seems like there's always a price he must paid.

and not only Italy, there are some major stereotypes about British people as well. Just read one of the scenes with Lord Wilmore. He's such a caricature of what (I guess) Dumas imagined a British person to be.
I grew up in the U.S. and have spent most of my adult life in Japan, so my knowledge of European cultures is sadly lacking. I am really enjoying all the historical notes in the back of the book.

I didn't realize that Corsicans saw themselves different from other European cultures. I just saw them as French

I don't know, I think it is a sad way to spend your life, that you can never get over something bad that has happened to you. But as I have struggled for many years on learning to forgive people I can understand how hard it would be for Edmond. On the other hand he is Catholic and they believe strongly in forgivness.

But anyway i do love books with many pages!!! i have more to read :):):):):):):D



Maybe we could also choose a short book for July for those who finish early? Like The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes or The Picture of Dorian Gray. Those are less than 300 pages.

"The effect of the serials, which held vast audiences enthralled ... is unlike any experience of reading we are likely to have known ourselves, maybe something like that of a particularly gripping television series. Day after day, at breakfast or at work or on the street, people talked of little else."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Coun...

But, Edmond is a very awesome figure in other way. He can hold his emotions in times of need. He is admirable in bringing himself, very quiet obviously. I like the way he arrange everything on its place. So brilliant!

