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What the Dickens
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Huck
(last edited Apr 22, 2022 10:35AM)
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Apr 22, 2022 10:34AM

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Re Dickens, I did read Great Expectations when I was quite young (10-12) because it was the custom at that time to give children gifts of the "classics". I also read Villette, The Last Days of Pompeii and Wuthering Heights around this time (only the latter made any lasting impression on me). I recently tried to re-read A Tale of Two Cities and will admit I struggled with it. I found the language rather convoluted and had difficulty differentiating between Darnay and Carton on the page.
I rather think any text set in the school syllabus is likely to be viewed with distaste by students only because they feel they are required to value its worthiness. I don't know how you get around this. Perhaps you start with the film version, then get students to read the original and discuss the difference. Of course, this approach doesn't favour imagination and students might be puzzled by characters who didn't make the cut in the filmed version.
I don't know any young people who would choose to read "the classics" these days. Perhaps our definition of classics has to widen. Mind you, I despair of the quality of writing in many current best sellers. It's abysmal!
P.S. I DO love the filmed version of David Copperfield with Daniel Radcliffe
https://www.amazon.co.uk/David-Copper...




Ha! By coincidence I'm rereading right now, Three Men... of course.



https://schoolreadinglist.co.uk/tag/g..."
Thanks Tim - really interesting to see quite a few yankee works listed. Would love to see Catch 22 and Bonfire of the Vanities there, perhaps a Carson McCullers? Steinbeck is perfect but i think SciFi should be represented more. And i find it worthy but surprising how much Shakespeare is included, perhaps at expense of other great dramatists - Shaw, Wilde, Ibsen, Jonson. I also note that Short Stories don't feature - which is puzzling?

the only book i can recollect from school is 'The Invisible Man' by Ralph Ellison - the teacher thought i had ripped it off for a short story i had written (i hadn't), and lent me a copy to read - of course i still have it, and have read it at least twice, classic!

the only book i can recollect from school is 'The Invisible Man' by Ralph Ellison..."
Hi Tech - would be interested to know why you don't fancy them? OK Shakespeare is difficult because the language is complicated and the vocabulary archaic but Dickens, although wordy, has some gripping stories, amazing characters and a certain relevance even today. If the Invisible Man isn't on the list, it should be -in fact both books by that name, although i think Ellison's is probably for 16years plus.



Not punk enough? Shakespeare practically invented it!
https://blogs.bl.uk/english-and-drama...