Completists' Club discussion

This topic is about
Charles Dickens
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Charles Dickens

I haven't read more than a handful of Dickens other books, though I would like to. David Copperfield is always somewhere on the horizon.





Even thinking about reading another Dickens novel makes me all excited. Seems my pattern is for one or two a year.
From what I have read, it feels like the longer the work is the better I end up in opinion of it. Copperfield and Dombey are at the top, and I wonder if it is because they become so absorbing for so long that they might as well have been stitched to my being. But I haven't attempted the monstrous Bleak House, so my speculation stops there.


Is anyone familiar with the Jasper Fforde series of Thursday Next? It's a fun ride. The second book in the series, Lost in a Good Book, makes you see Miss Havisham in a whole new light!

"Bleak House" is one of my favorites.

Wow! How did you find his journalism? I'd imagine all those pieces and the letters would be a real slog for me. Also, you might be able to help with the list of books where all the bits and bobs are collected. I know Hesperus Press have a lot of the collaborative stories in print.


Wow! How did you find his journalism? I'd imagine all those pieces and the letters would be a real slog for me."
It did take me quite awhile to finish, but I enjoyed it for the most part. I love his sarcasm and a lot of his journalism is filled with it.

http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/d/c... is a good -- though not always perfect -- resource for this kind of thing.
I used to belong to a Dickens group and have quite a bit of printed info on stuff like that, so I'll check it when I get a chance.


impressed! very!

But there is still more I haven't got to yet, including the memoirs of the clown Joseph Grimaldi which he edited/rewrote, plus some plays that I haven't got to yet, and I'm pretty sure there are more short stories and journalism. I also haven't as yet read all the Hesperus reprints of the Christmas numbers of his magazines - I have read a couple so far and appreciate having the list of these, as I think they may contain more Dickens stories that aren't in the collected Christmas Stories published by Chapman and Hall, as well as the stories by other writers which are interesting to read too.
One of Dickens's collaborations with Wilkie Collins isn't on the list above - 'No Thoroughfare', which is a good short novel. I think it's quite easy to tell which sections are by which author, but their styles do go well together. 'A Child's History of England' and 'The Life of Our Lord' are a couple more works which spring to mind - both are probably for completists only, but then again that is the point of this group!

I'm sure Judy's read as much as any Dickens expert, and I know she knows much more than I do. She'll be invaluable to this group.
I haven't read all the letters and I'm sure I've missed some of the uncollected stuff.
I have read all that Judy mentions in her 3rd paragraph, and reading "No Thoroughfare" was due to a Yahoo group that she moderated/owned.



My favorite, though I recognize its imperfections, is probably "Our Mutual Friend." "Bleak House" might be a close 2nd as I love the description of the legal case and its effects on the characters.
I tend toward the 'darker side', so my least favorite is probably "Pickwick." And then "Nickleby." Though there are parts of both, of course, that I think are great.

I haven't read much Dickens since finishing the collected journalism (in 2010), so this group might be a good impetus to get me going again.

I suppose my least favourites out of the novels are probably 'Barnaby Rudge' and 'The Old Curiosity Shop', which both seem rather patchy, though, having said that, there are some great patches.


Yes, those are all great! I need to reread "Drood" one day.
I ended up liking "Barnaby Rudge" so much more than I thought I would. And while I agree that "Curiosity" has its issues, I read it when I was young and loved it then, so it's probably a sentimental favorite, as befits it, I guess. And then I bought a copy of it when visiting London as an adult and read it on the plane home, so that seems to have added to its value for me.

She was first married to Wilkie Collins' brother, who was also an artist, right? Seems to me I remember something about her father not approving of that marriage at first ... I bet it is interesting.

I tend towards the darker side too, but I love 'Pickwick' - and although it is so sunny and humorous most of the time there are some dark sections, like the part in the Fleet prison. 'Nickleby' isn't one of my favourites either, but I do love Fanny Squeers and the actors. Must agree that 'Our Mutual Friend' is great!

Yes, that's right - I'm not very far into the biography, by Dickens' descendant Lucinda Hawksley, as yet as I'm reading too many books at once, but it's interesting so far, though unfortunately it doesn't have proper footnotes.

Yes, that's right - I'm not very far into the biography, by Dickens' descendant Lucinda Hawksley, a..."
I look forward to your review, Judy.


Language evolves. In 200 years from now we may all be speaking in a form of text-speak shorthand. lik u hv 2 lt lngge evove!



Please feel free to join! We can read them in just ~30 pages a day.


Thanks, MJ! I'm really looking forward to this. :)

There was also a life of Jesus that Dickens intended for his own children but not for a wider public.
Having read Ackroyd's biography of Dickens (as a big part of my research for a Dickens-related short story), I now want to read the more recent biographies by Michael Slater and Claire Tomalin.

Please do, so you can tell

Please do, so you can tell me us which one is best."
I have Slater's biography sitting on my shelf waiting for my perusal. I have yet to acquire Tomalin's. But I've heard good things about it.


The Pickwick Papers (April 1836-November 1837)
The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby (April 1838 to October 1839)
The Old Curiosity Shop (April 25, 1840 to February 6, 1841)
Barnaby Rudge: A Tale of the Riots of 'Eighty' (February 13, 1841, to November 27, 1841)
The Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit (January 1843 to July 1844)
Dombey and Son (October 1846 to April 1848)
David Copperfield (May 1849 to November 1850)
Bleak House (March 1852 to September 1853)
Little Dorrit (December 1855 to June 1857)
Our Mutual Friend (May 1864 to November 1865)
The Mystery of Edwin Drood (April 1870 to September 1870).

It also depends on which Dickens novel I've recently found at the used bookstore in an everyman's library version. But I imagine that is correlated with popularity and I also imagine that popularity with Dickens is somewhat correlated with size (imperfectly, but somewhat).
If I have two copies, say one penguin or modern library paperback AND the everyman's library version, I do feel more compelled to read the book sooner, but again that is probably indirectly correlated to popularity and size.
Mainly, it is just where the wind blows me and what I've read immediately before. Right now I'm reading 'David Copperfield' and I think my next read will be 'Our Mutual Friend', so no... just the weight of the moon and the spin of the stars and the way my cheese curdles (tyromancy).

Books mentioned in this topic
Jack Maggs (other topics)No Thoroughfare (other topics)
Pictures from Italy (other topics)
A Christmas Carol, and Other Christmas Books (other topics)
Sketches by Boz (other topics)
More...
Serialised Novels:
The Pickwick Papers (April 1836-November 1837)
The Adventures of Oliver Twist (February 1837 to April 1839)
The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby (April 1838 to October 1839)
The Old Curiosity Shop (April 25, 1840 to February 6, 1841)
Barnaby Rudge: A Tale of the Riots of 'Eighty' (February 13, 1841, to November 27, 1841)
The Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit (January 1843 to July 1844)
Dombey and Son (October 1846 to April 1848)
David Copperfield (May 1849 to November 1850)
Bleak House (March 1852 to September 1853)
Hard Times: For These Times (April 1, 1854, to August 12, 1854)
Little Dorrit (December 1855 to June 1857)
A Tale of Two Cities (April 30, 1859, to November 26, 1859)
Great Expectations (December 1, 1860 to August 3, 1861)
Our Mutual Friend (May 1864 to November 1865)
The Mystery of Edwin Drood (April 1870 to September 1870).
Christmas Books:
A Christmas Carol (1843)
The Chimes (1844)
The Cricket on the Hearth (1845)
The Battle of Life (1846)
The Haunted Man and the Ghost's Bargain (1848)
A Christmas Carol and Other Christmas Books (OUP 2008)
Other Works in Penguin:
Sketches by Boz
American Notes for General Circulation
Selected Journalism, 1850-1870
Pictures from Italy
Selected Short Fiction
Collaborative Works/ Other Miscellany from Hesperus Press:
A Round of Stories by the Christmas Fire
Another Round of Stories by the Christmas Fire
The Holly-Tree Inn
A House to Let
The Lazy Tour of Two Idle Apprentices
Mrs Lirriper
Mugby Junction
On London
On Theatre
On Travel
The Seven Poor Travellers
Somebody's Luggage
The Wreck of the Golden Mary
No Thoroughfare
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_...