Community Reviews

Rating(3.9 / 5.0, 54 votes)
5 stars
17(31%)
4 stars
17(31%)
3 stars
20(37%)
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54 reviews
April 17,2025
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In my pursuit of literature on the French Revolution, A Tale of Two Cities is one of my favorites. While everyone knows Dickens can be verbose at times, he is very descriptive of these times and seasons, and of many historic locations (including the Bastille, which is no longer visible in Paris). I particularly enjoyed the story's intertwining of lives of families in both London and Paris. Sidney Cardon is my favorite character, who in the end, demonstrates the greatness of humanity, for which he is remembered for generations.
April 17,2025
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This omnibus of novels and novellas by Charles Dickens consists of Great Expectations, Hard Times, A Christmas Carol, and A Tale of Two Cities. Because I don't have the stamina or the patience to read all of these at one time, I decided to read each individually when the time is right. I will review each work as I finish it until I eventually have read them all. Below are links to my reviews for each of the works that I have read.

Great Expectations by Charles Dickens - Began 1/25/18 and finished 3/6/18, Rated 2/5


Hard Times by Charles Dickens - Began 2/19/2020 and finished 3/14/2020, Rated 1/5

A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens - Began and finished on 12/1/2011, Rated 4/5

A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens - Began 12/4/16 and finished 12/13/16, Rated 4/5
April 17,2025
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It's Charles Dickens. What more can I say? He's amazing, and his expertise with literary writing is incredible. His themes in his story are inspiring. He's Charles Dickens :)
April 17,2025
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Just finished reading Tale of two cities. It can really make you think.
April 17,2025
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This book has allot to do with expectations couse if u have great expectations and it does not happen u might not be very happy so this book taught me not to have great expectations!
April 17,2025
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who knew a ghost story would become one of Christmas's best loved tales! A tale of two cities is Dickens best book in my opinion. One recommendation; first time you read it skim over the first chapter then come back and read it after you finish the book, It makes sence then. I first read great expectations with my Mother, great memories.
April 17,2025
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Reading "A Christmas Carol" to my daughters.
April 17,2025
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I read A Tale of Two Cities, hard read, but what a love story!!!

And of course the classic A Christmas Carol, I read that every other year.
April 17,2025
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Of course we read this one in our group awhile ago, but I just found a great article for those of you who were with us back then, or have read it before. Thought you might enjoy!

Dickens vs. Darwin
A Question of Worldview

December 28, 2009

Two of the most famous books in the Western canon turned 150 years old in 2009—On the Origin of Species by Charles Darwin, and A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens.

But these anniversaries were celebrated in vastly different ways. While Darwin’s book was honored around the globe with films and websites and much more, relatively few people took notice that Dickens’s book had reached the same milestone.

Why the difference? My colleague Gina Dalfonzo, in an article on BreakPoint Online, suggests that one reason might be “the difference in worldview.” Gina points out that Origin of Species is built on Darwin’s materialistic principles, while A Tale of Two Cities takes a more traditional and biblical view of things.

It’s easy to see how our educational and media elite would gravitate toward the work that more faithfully reflects their own views, even if they don’t fully realize why they’re doing it.

Both authors lived at a time when Western culture was transitioning from faith in God to faith in humanity and its progress. Darwin went along with the change, embracing materialism and seeing his own scientific studies in its light.

But Dickens resisted. His faith has been called “simple”—he was not openly interested in complex theological questions, and he did not always adhere to church doctrine. But he maintained his belief in a loving Creator to the end of his life.

Isn’t it interesting that it was Darwin who was swept up in some of the uglier trends of his day? Dr. Benjamin Wiker has recently pointed out Darwin’s interest in the theories of Thomas Malthus, who thought that the “surplus population”—the weak and the unfit—were holding humanity back. The influence of this belief can be seen in Origin of Species and in Darwin’s other works.

Personally, Darwin believed in helping the poor and sick, but his personal life did not fit with his actual ideas. His theory boiled down to “might makes right,” and that meant survival was the highest ethical good.

On the other hand, Dickens parodied Malthus in his works, and showed the moral bankruptcy of his theories. In A Tale of Two Cities, a novel about the French Revolution, Dickens shows a struggle for power between two families, a struggle that turns into a cycle of violence and revenge. Madame Defarge, a central figure in the cycle, has no mercy for her victims once she gets them in her power; in fact, you might call her a fully Darwinian figure.

In the end, the cycle of violence can only be broken, and Madame Defarge disarmed, by another character’s self-sacrifice—the kind of act that would have no place in a Darwinian view of the world. But in Dickens’ biblically influenced view, this act of love and selflessness signifies the highest good of which humanity is capable.

Both Darwin and Dickens were optimistic men, but in fundamentally different ways. Darwin’s vision of future perfection would be merely a race of physically and mentally strong beings. Dickens’ hope was for a fundamentally moral society where the sick and weak were cared for, not pushed out of the way.

As the 150th anniversary year comes to an end for these two books, it’s a good time to compare how these radically different worldviews worked out in practice. All you’ve got to do is look at the evidence of the last 150 years for a clear answer to which one was true.
April 17,2025
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Love A Christmas Carol. Liked Great Expectations. Suzanne is making me read a Tale of Two Cities, it is a little slow moving, as was Great Expectations. Have not read Hard Times.
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