Helpful Score: 2
Great Classical book. Excellent read.
From the rear cover: "The year before he died, Charles Dickens wrote of 'David Copperfield', 'Of all my books, I like this the best.' The story of the abandoned waif who develops a 'disciplined heart' through challenging encounters with distress and misfortune is a supreme example of Dickens' skill as a novelist. In this great work, plots and couterplots are interwoven into one intricate, grand design...and a huge gallery of individual characters comes alive. The malignantly treacherous Uriah Heep, the jovial nurse Peggotty, the foolishly innocent Dora, the improvident Mr. Micawber, the egotistic and charming Steerforh-these stand among literature's most remembered people."
The enchanting story of a gentle orphan growing up in the indifferent adult world.
Persecuted by his wrathful stepfather; Decieved by his boyhood idol; hurled into an infatuation with a lovable, but dim-witted girl; he survives the worst, and best.
At last he grows into a disciplined and true man.
Persecuted by his wrathful stepfather; Decieved by his boyhood idol; hurled into an infatuation with a lovable, but dim-witted girl; he survives the worst, and best.
At last he grows into a disciplined and true man.
Full version of this classic 1004 pages.
I have been meaning to read David Copperfield since high school back in the 1960s. But I always found it to be rather daunting at over 800 pages in somewhat small print. But I decided to finally tackle it after over 50 years. I read a leather-bound Franklin edition that I have had on my shelves for many years along with most of Dickens' other works (most of which still need to be read).
David Copperfield is regarded as Dickens' most autobiographical work. It tells of David's childhood where he is tormented by his stepfather, Murdstone, by sending him to a very harsh school and then working in Murdstone's warehouse under very rough conditions. David goes on to work as a proctor and eventually finds happiness but his journey is long and filled with disappointments along the way.
The novel contains some of Dickens' most memorable characters, both good and evil. These include Mr. Murdstone who marries David's widowed mother and is the bane of David's existence as a boy; David's Aunt Betsey Trotwood who was present at David's birth and was expecting a girl so left when she was told the baby was a boy (she later came to David's rescue and helped him through school); Clara Peggoty, servant of the Copperfield family and a lifelong companion to David; Steerforth, a friend to David when he attended the early harsh school but who later was not the friend David thought he was; Mr. Macawber, who is always in debt but thinks something will always turn up for the better; Mr. Wickfield, lawyer to David's aunt; Agnes Wickfield, daughter of Mr. Wickfield and later marries David; Uriah Heep, clerk for the Wickfield's who commits fraud to get what he wants. And many, many more...
Okay, this was a very long novel and at some points, I almost gave up on it. As with many other novels of the time, it is filled with coincidences where certain characters come into the story when they had seemed to go elsewhere. It is basically, a story of good and evil and of course good triumphs in the end. The well-meaning characters are rewarded, while the evil characters are punished or killed. Overall, I was glad I stuck with this but I doubt if I'll be reading another Dickens novel anytime soon!
David Copperfield is regarded as Dickens' most autobiographical work. It tells of David's childhood where he is tormented by his stepfather, Murdstone, by sending him to a very harsh school and then working in Murdstone's warehouse under very rough conditions. David goes on to work as a proctor and eventually finds happiness but his journey is long and filled with disappointments along the way.
The novel contains some of Dickens' most memorable characters, both good and evil. These include Mr. Murdstone who marries David's widowed mother and is the bane of David's existence as a boy; David's Aunt Betsey Trotwood who was present at David's birth and was expecting a girl so left when she was told the baby was a boy (she later came to David's rescue and helped him through school); Clara Peggoty, servant of the Copperfield family and a lifelong companion to David; Steerforth, a friend to David when he attended the early harsh school but who later was not the friend David thought he was; Mr. Macawber, who is always in debt but thinks something will always turn up for the better; Mr. Wickfield, lawyer to David's aunt; Agnes Wickfield, daughter of Mr. Wickfield and later marries David; Uriah Heep, clerk for the Wickfield's who commits fraud to get what he wants. And many, many more...
Okay, this was a very long novel and at some points, I almost gave up on it. As with many other novels of the time, it is filled with coincidences where certain characters come into the story when they had seemed to go elsewhere. It is basically, a story of good and evil and of course good triumphs in the end. The well-meaning characters are rewarded, while the evil characters are punished or killed. Overall, I was glad I stuck with this but I doubt if I'll be reading another Dickens novel anytime soon!
Oscar-winning actor Ben Kingsley reads it.
Still deserving its classic status.
I really liked this book. I was supposed to read this in high school but rejected it as too boring. A few (great many) years later comes maturity and what do you know, a great novel to spend time with.
This adaptation of David Copperfield is a captivating story of a privileged boy who enjoyed reading stories of his favorite heros. but his life changed when his mother married the evil Mr. Murdstone who forces him to work in the cheese factory. Davy becomes a real-life hero and turns a grim situation into an exciting adventure.
A classic, you can't go wrong with Dickens. His descriptions not only describe the physical scene but paint an emotional picture as well. Truly a writer's writer.
"Adapted for young readers and fully illustrated"
A classic. Good summer reading for teens or really anyone.