RANDOM JOTTINGS


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I write this on 3 January 2012 and have already read a comment or two in the papers that we may have had too much Dickens and that we will be Dickensed out by the end of the year.  We have already had the BBC adaptation of Great Expectations which I loved though it seems to have divided opinion, an excellent programme presented by Sue Perkins on the way Dickens treated his wife Catherine Hogarth, and the other night somebody called Iannucci who I am told is a wit and a comedian fronting a prog on BBC2.   I watched and was forced to switch off after 20 minutes for the usual reasons – it was an excellent radio talk and I spent most of it watching with my eyes shut in order to avoid the endless shots of running water, clouds, ruined churches and endless shots of people walking around with carrier bags. I presume the latter was to emphasise Dicken's 'teeming' London.   Next week we have the Mystery of Edwin Drood about which I know very little so am looking forward to that.  Mark you, as I have already seen the trailer about 12 times I am beginning to wonder if I need to watch.

Well I am going to be doing my bit about Dickens this month before everyone feels they have had to much of The Inimitable.  A guest post will be up in a week or so by a distinguished author and I am delighted to say that OUP have promised me a Dickens books (of which more later) as a prize in a draw. They have also promised to send it anywhere in the world which means anybody can join in regardless of where they live, be it Bognor Regis or Ulan Bator. 

I love Charles Dickens and have done since I first read David Copperfield, a junior version which finishes with his meeting up with Aunt Betsy, when I was about eleven.   I did not find out that it was much longer than that until a year or two later and was thrilled to bits. I found parts of the adult book uninteresting but do remember Uriah Heep very well (who doesn't?) and the ghastly Mr Micawber who I always found acutely annoying even at that tender age.  I read Great Expectations when I was about 13 and loved the first part of the book, but not so keen on the later stages when Pip went to London and became obnoxious.

The BBC in those long ago days always had a Classic Serial at 5.30 pm on a Sunday afternoon. I remember watching Oliver Twist. It had 13 half hour episodes and I never missed one. I have fond memories of watching these as a child. Is there anybody out there who remembers Patrick Troughton, the first Dr Who, as Quilp in The Old Curiosity Shop?  Wonderful stuff.   These adaptations were put out at this time as they expected the family and, particularly children, to watch them.  Can't see the Beeb doing that now somehow.

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I have most of Dicken's books on my shelves and over the next 12 months am going to have a try at re-reading some of my favourites.   I might try Great Expectations as I feel a renewed interest after last week and see what I think about it again. Must be over thirty years since I last looked at and that is far too long.

I will also be rewatching some of the DVDs which I have on my shelves.  I have one of Nicholas Nickleby, Great Expectations with Ion Grufydd as Pip, two versions of Bleak House and a rather sweet edition of David Copperfield with a pre-Harry Potter, Daniel Radcliffe, playing the young David.

Are any of you out there planning on any reads, re-read, or book group readings of Dickens? Do let me know.   I would also love to know your own personal Dickens favourite.  David Copperfield and Bleak House are neck and neck as far as I am concerned each one taking it in turns to draw ahead and then fall back as I have a rethink.   Both wonderful works.

We have a big year this year in the UK – not only all the Dickens celebrations, but the Queen's Jubilee which I am looking forward to with all its pageantry and fun, and the Olympics, which I am not.

But that is a rant for another day……..

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17 responses to “Dickens, Dickens, Dickens”

  1. ChrisCross53 Avatar

    I remember the BBC Sunday serials, and can recollect watching Oliver Twist – possibly the same one you saw. It was the first Dickens’ novel I read, and I cried and laughed all the way through, just as I do today!

  2. anne Avatar
    anne

    I watched a BBC adaptation of David Copperfield, and of Oliver Twist, back in the 70s — Masterpiece Theater, I believe, carried them on Sunday pm…and then about a decade ago, Wishbone did some Dickens bits — Oliver Twist and Tale of Two Cities — both of which were excellent in their way, and got some younger kids I knew (my kids included) interested in the “real” stories. If you don’t know Wishbone, you need to find him (he’s a dog). The adaptations were obviously abbreviated but the costuming was very true to period, etc, and they did a great job making the viewer interested in the books!

  3. Carole Avatar
    Carole

    I went to a performance of Edwin Drood with Ernie Wise and I think Lulu years ago in London – we left at the interval and I think it closed soon afterwards. Every time the players said Edwin Drood the audience had to ooooohhh. Not great!
    I love A Tale of Two Cities, but haven’t read anything else, I may have to remedy that.
    Hope you are feeling much better.

  4. Heather Bond Avatar
    Heather Bond

    I am about 200 pages in to Bleak House and loving it as I love all Dickens. I thought the recent BBC adaptation was excellent though I am curious to see the earlier version with Diana Rigg as Lady Deadlock. My favorite is still Nicholas Nickleby. I saw the 8 hour stage production in Los Angeles and then fell in love with the book. I have the Claire Tomalin biography waiting in the wings.
    I don’t evny you the Olympics having survived them in Los Angeles in 1984. Lay in plenty of supplies and avoid the city!

  5. Liz F Avatar
    Liz F

    I have a whole set of beautifully bound Dickens, complete with original illustrations, which I inherited from my maternal grandfather who grew up in a bookish but poor family and always made a point of buying books when things got better financially for him.
    I read A Christmas Carol for the first time this Christmas but up to that point, I had only read Oliver Twist at school in what would now be Year Nine, and I feel woefully ignorant! Thanks for the advice to start with David Copperfield – I will go and find granddad’s copy ASAP.

  6. Margaret Powling Avatar
    Margaret Powling

    I’m not a big Dickens fan, indeed I was put off Dickens at an early age through having to read David Copperfield in the 2nd or 3rd form (no idea what that is now) in grammar school. I found it utterly bor-ring. Why do schools press the classics on pupils? They weren’t written for kiddiwinks, but for adults. However, I have loved watching various versions of Our Mutual Friend on TV and loved the last serialization of Bleak House, in 1/2 hr chunks. But there is bound to be loadsaDickens in his bi-centenial year, which is far better than loadsaAlmostAnythingElse!
    As for that over-hyped games’ show in London in the summer … I think that anyone who mentions this on your blog from now on should pay some sort of forfeit …

  7. Lisa Eveleigh Avatar
    Lisa Eveleigh

    Happy New Year Elaine (we don’t go out either…). Like a lot of my generation I was force-fed Dickens at school, so avoided him at University and concentrated on Thackeray and Trollope. I thought I was still ‘Dickens-averse’ until I heard the excellent Radio 4 adaptation of ‘The Tale of Two Cities’ and am now reading that with much pleasure. Best wishes, Lisa

  8. J. Dvorak Avatar
    J. Dvorak

    I loved the Micawber-Heep scene in David Copperfield and used to read it aloud to myself for increased effect! I will probably re-read Bleak House this year and perhaps David Copperfield…if I can get outside the Michael Slater Dickens biography by Christmas 2012!

  9. Jo Avatar

    The only Dickens I have read is Oliver Twist which we had to do at school and I think I as the only one in the class that loved it. I watched most of the tv adaptations – considered normal viewing in my home whilst growing up. I have set myself a challenge this year to read at least one Dickens, not sure what I will go with. Also going to visit the birthplace museum and see if I might catch one of their readings they do would see, silly not to when I live in Portsmouth.

  10. Elaine Simpson-Long Avatar

    Stu – I simply love David Copperfield and it rings so true because of course it is so autobiographical. Dickens loved it the best of his novels
    Bet – ah Yes I forgot I have Our Mutual Friend as well which I must rewatch. I had never read the book until this adaptation but did after watching this. David Morrisey is simply wonderful in this, as he is in everything really
    Susan in Tx – these OUP editions are just lovely. I prefer them to all other paperback editions, good clear pring and lovely paper and so beautifully produced. I shall be very interested to hear what you think of |Bleak House, please do let me know. Has one of the best openings in a novel EVER
    Susan – A Christmas Carol is read by me without fail on Christmas Eve each year. It never fails to keep me enthralled and enchanted
    Alex – try David Copperfield and see how you get on with that one. I always recommend it as a first Dickens and if you did not care for GE and OT this might do the trick
    Carole – I know plenty of people who cannot get on with Dickens so no shame in it at all. As I have just said to Alex, try David Copperfield.
    Tina – yes GE was on the curriculum here in the UK many moons ago when I was at school and I remember being taken to see the David Lean film as a school outing and simply loving it. Helped the reading enormously. How are you getting on with Mansfield Park? JA’s most tricky book I think and most people dont care for Fanny Price but I love her

  11. Tina Avatar

    I plan to reread Great Expectations between now and Feb. 7th. This piece of literature is the bane of existence to all scholars in high school in America who are subjected to reading it as a part of the Honors/Advanced Placement timeline. I teach high school English; however, my last exposure to Great Expectations was with my daughter when she was in the 9th grade Honors English program. Since then, I only hear my former juniors, now in their senior year, complain about reading it during their AP Literature course. So, not remembering it being that difficult of a read when I, during my 9th Honors English course, read it, I plan to give it a “go”…must finish Austen’s Mansfield Park first, though.

  12. carole bruce Avatar
    carole bruce

    Shame on me but I have never got on with Dickens. I think I will try again this year as there has been a long gap since the last try. I would love to love Dickens, he gives people so much pleasure and I want some of that!!

  13. Alex (The Sleepless Reader) Avatar

    I’ve read Great Expectations and Oliver Twist and had difficulties with both. Have Our Mutual Friend on the TBR ever since I saw the wonderful BBC adaptation, but somehow never get around to reading it. Still, I want to pay homage, so might read Claire Tomalin’s new biography or read “What Jane Austen Ate and Charles Dickens Knew” (also on the TBR for a while now).

  14. Susan in TX Avatar
    Susan in TX

    I’m immersing myself in Dickens this month, currently reading Bleak House for the first time. My favorite Dickens to date would be a tie between David Copperfield and Pickwick. (We’ll see if Bleak House knocks one of these out.) Your picture of all those OUP covers might just qualify for “book porn.” :)

  15. Susan E Avatar
    Susan E

    I encountered David Copperfield at an early age too, in my grandfather’s small soft sided leather volume, and read up until David was safe with Aunt Betsy Trotwood. If asked, I think I would have said he was a real boy. Great Expectations, Bleak House and A Christmas Carol are my other favorites. This year, I might try one I haven’t read as often…maybe Little Dorrit or Pickwick…listened to some delightful excerpts from Pickwick Papers by Richard Scofield…marrvelous.

  16. Bet Avatar
    Bet

    I haven’t read them all, but my favorite so far is Nicholas Nickleby. My favorite adaptation is the BBC one of Our Mutual Friend. Our family used to watch it at least once a year.

  17. stujallen Avatar

    I always loved david copperfield I think it is my favourite uriah heap and micawber are to classic dickens characters I m hoping to read a couple of his books next year ,all the best stu

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