Saturday, March 10, 2012

Oliver Twist [Kindle Edition] review


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Oliver Twist was Dickens's second novel and considered one of his darkest, working with burglary, kidnapping, child abuse, prostitution, and murder. Alongside this gallery of horrors include the corrupt and incompetent institutions of 19th-century England set as much as address social problems and instead causing them to be worse. The author's moral indignation drives the coming of a number of his most memorably grotesque characters: squirming, vile Fagin; brutal Bill Sykes; the brooding, sickly Monks; and Bumble, the pompous and incorrigibly dense beadle. Clearly, a reading on this work must carry the author's passionate narrative voice while being flexible and broad enough to define the wide selection of character voices suggested with the text. John Wells's capable but bland reading only suggests the rich possibilities with the material. Restraint and Dickens simply don't go together. The abridgment deftly and seamlessly manages to deliver all major characters and plot lines, but there are several superior audiobook versions of this material, both abridged and unabridged. Not recommended.
-John Owen, Advanced Micro Devices, Sunnyvale, CA
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

"The image of little Oliver Twist victimised by poverty, almost seduced through the specious excitement of crime, and then offered the possibility of your lucrative career in authorship is always compelling."
—Guardian
 
"We leave him most reluctantly, and thus will every reader who may have any capacity to find out and feel whatsoever is most loveable, hateful, or laughable, inside character of the everyday routine about him."
—Examiner
 
"He deals truly with human nature, which never can degrade; he takes up everything, good, bad, or indifferent, that they works up right into a rich alluvial deposit. He's natural, which never might be ridiculous."
—Quarterly Review






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