The Inimitable
Feb. 7th, 2012 10:17 amI read Pickwick Papers as a child and wanted to be Sam Weller. Afraid that nothing would ever live up to the splendiferousness of Pickwick, I left Dickens alone through early adolescence- and then- at seventeen- fell deeply in love with Little Dorrit. I've read all the major novels except Barnaby Rudge (most of them at least twice). My politics- an apple-cheeked Christian socialism fuelled by rage at the Merdles and Tite-Barnacles (who still run the world)- are essentially Dickens's politics. I love many other novelists, but Dickens is in a class apart- and there have been times in my life when (like Charlie Chaplin) I couldn't be bothered with reading anyone else. No-one- before or since (and that even includes Shakespeare)- has ever been so lively.
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Date: 2012-02-07 02:16 pm (UTC)G.K. Chesterton said they were like lengths sawn off a single log.
The critical consensus seems to have settled on Bleak House, but an earlier generation would have said David Copperfield. Great Expectations is the most nearly perfect. My personal favourite is Little Dorrit.
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Date: 2012-02-07 02:21 pm (UTC)I love him for his discursiveness, his humour- and almost everything except his plots. The only one of his books that is conventionally well plotted is Great Expectations.
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Date: 2012-02-07 04:43 pm (UTC)I didn't read that one until after I'd seen Christine Edzard's amazing 1988 film, but I loved it when I did. It might be one of my favorites just for the language alone.
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