Share
Organize
Explore
has ALL you need!
A community for book lovers to create their own bookshelves, share and explore books.
Sign Up for FREE!Similar books
The Italian | Gulliver's Travels | Moby Dick | King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table | Great Expectations |
Groups with this in collection
Networking Book Club (6) | England England (1050) |
- Book Details
- English Books
- Rating:



(240)
4 stars 
3 stars 
2 stars 
1 star 
- 528 Pages
- ISBN-10: 0141031719
- ISBN-13: 9780141031712
- Publisher: Penguin Classics
- Pub date: Oct 25, 2007
- Dimensions: 709 cm x 433 cm x 142 cm Just how big is that?
- In other languages:

FAQ
How does the voting work?
Find a comment helpful / unhelpful? Cast your vote. Only one vote from each person will be counted. Every hour we gather all the votes, add them up, add some magic source, and there we have the new sorting for the comments on the page of this book!I see mistakes in the book information. How can I fix it?
Under "Book details", there is a link labeled "Improve data of this book". You can use that form to send us the correct information.


For me, this is where Dickens hits his all-time low point. I really hated this book. It displays very little of his characteristically superb irony and exquisite writing. The most that can be said for it is that it's easily accessible, but his shameful treatment of the Fagin character and the anti- ... Continue
For me, this is where Dickens hits his all-time low point. I really hated this book. It displays very little of his characteristically superb irony and exquisite writing. The most that can be said for it is that it's easily accessible, but his shameful treatment of the Fagin character and the anti-semitism embodied therein is severely off-putting. (though Dickens atoned for this later by his fine speech given to the character of the Jewish gentleman in "Our Mutual Friend). Nevertheless, the character of Oliver himself is far from lovable - he's saccharine to point of cloying.
Although OT is a standard of many middle-school English class curricula, it doesn't really display Dickens at his full power. (For a story about a sad-sack orphan you can actually like, try David Copperfield.)