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Great Expectations by Charles Dickens
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Great Expectations (Penguin Classics)

by Charles Dickens

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Penguin Audiobooks (2003), Audio CD, 3 pages

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Showing 1-5 of 114 (next | show all)
The book was not as depressing as I expected. A poor boy made upwardly mobile by a secret benefactor who doesn't reveal himself until the end, being a convict that the boy helped at the stories outset.

I couldn't really sift out any moral lesson.

And it provides a mostly-happy ending the whole family can enjoy. ( )
  mortensengarth | Dec 24, 2009 |
I think Algernon Swinburne put it best when he said that its "defects are as nearly imperceptible as spots on the sun or shadow on a sunlit sea." A perfect novel, one of the best in the language. Dickens again and again instills a kind of pride in me for being a native English speaker. ( )
  ggoes | Nov 27, 2009 |
I did not like this book at all. It's been a while since I read it, so I can't really explain why, but I know I didn't like it. See my review on A Tale of Two Cities. ( )
  EnglishGeek13 | Nov 23, 2009 |
I have to confess that I kept putting off snapping the binding on this book because it started to feel like I had a college assignment that I truly didn't want to read. However, I am glad that I read "Great Expectations." It was actually my second time through as I realized when I started reading...I discovered that this book was one of the classics that I read in between college and dental school when I was bound and determined to read as many of the classics as possible. I have to confess that it was definitely a different experience reading as a seasoned adult versus a naive 20 year old. "Great Expectations" follows the classic Dickensian plot of an orphan who comes of age and learns valuable life lessons along the way. Written in the first person by Pip, you are constantly coming in contact with characters that you love or hate with very little in between gray. There are definite high points in the story...love the scenes with Miss Haversham and low points...did not enjoy the years when Pip is an apprentice with his brother-in-law Joe. ( )
  knithappened | Nov 10, 2009 |
Pontificating, proselytizing protagonist surrounded by brainless supporting characters, all written by an author who is full of himself. After this, I have no respect for Dickens and all the "masterpieces" he believes himself to have created. If there's one thing I can't stand, it's self-important authors who write stories in which their condescension shines through. ( )
  stephxsu | Oct 25, 2009 |
Showing 1-5 of 114 (next | show all)
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Epigraph
Dedication
Affectionately Inscribed
to
Chauncy Hare Townshend
First words
My father's family name being Pirrip, and my christian name Philip, my infant tongue could make of both names nothing longer or more explicit than Pip. So, I called myself Pip, and came to be called Pip.
Quotations
If you can’t get to be oncommon through going straight, you’ll never get to do it through going crooked.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Book description

Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0141439564, Paperback)

Dickens considered Great Expectations one of his "little pieces," and indeed, it is slim compared to such weighty novels as David Copperfield or Nicholas Nickleby. But what this cautionary tale of a young man raised high above his station by a mysterious benefactor lacks in length, it more than makes up for in its remarkable characters and compelling story. The novel begins with young orphaned Philip Pirrip--Pip--running afoul of an escaped convict in a cemetery. This terrifying personage bullies Pip into stealing food and a file for him, threatening that if he tells a soul "your heart and your liver shall be tore out, roasted and ate." The boy does as he's asked, but the convict is captured anyway, and transported to the penal colonies in Australia. Having started his novel in a cemetery, Dickens then ups the stakes and introduces his hero into the decaying household of Miss Havisham, a wealthy, half-mad woman who was jilted on her wedding day many years before and has never recovered. Pip is brought there to play with Miss Havisham's ward, Estella, a little girl who delights in tormenting Pip about his rough hands and future as a blacksmith's apprentice.
I had never thought of being ashamed of my hands before; but I began to consider them a very indifferent pair. Her contempt for me was so strong, that it became infectious, and I caught it.
It is an infection that Pip never quite recovers from; as he spends more time with Miss Havisham and the tantalizing Estella, he becomes more and more discontented with his guardian, the kindhearted blacksmith, Joe, and his childhood friend Biddy. When, after several years, Pip becomes the heir of an unknown benefactor, he leaps at the chance to leave his home and friends behind to go to London and become a gentleman. But having expectations, as Pip soon learns, is a two-edged sword, and nothing is as he thought it would be. Like that other "little piece," A Tale of Two Cities, Great Expectations is different from the usual Dickensian fare: the story is dark, almost surreal at times, and you'll find few of the author's patented comic characters and no comic set pieces. And yet this is arguably the most compelling of Dickens's novels for, unlike David Copperfield or Martin Chuzzlewit, the reader can never be sure that things will work out for Pip. Even Dickens apparently had his doubts--he wrote two endings for this novel. --Alix Wilber

(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 11:40:08 -0500)

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