I stayed up until midnight last night finishing Charles Dickens' Great Expectations, and I am so delighted with the book that I just had to post something about it.
As most of you probably know, Great Expectations is the story of a poor boy who is befriended by a ghostly old woman and falls in love with a scornful rich girl, both of which make him decide to be a gentleman; but when he suddenly becomes heir to a large sum of money and property from an unknown benefactor, he encounters many trials, adventures, and heartbreaks as he tries to realize his "great expectations" (which would today be translated as "high hopes" or "big dreams" or something similar).

I couldn't put it down. I read it instead of studying last night for my linguistics test tomorrow. I have never experienced Dickens before, and I am completely in awe of his ability to tell a creepy, sad, heartbreaking story like that one and make it so dear and beautiful and uproariously funny. But he did. I laughed so hard - even when it was after midnight and I was sitting in the middle of the living room floor completely by myself with all the lights off in the house except two, I was laughing out loud at the part where Pip spends the dreadful night in the Hummums. And the second that Joe came to him (toward the end; you might know the part, but I won't spoil it), I started to cry and I cried all through the rest of the book. It was so beautiful.

- Herbert and Joe. I am head-over-heels in love with Herbert Pocket. He is sweet, funny, optimistic, lively, gentle, innocent, and modest. If I could find a man like that in real life! And Joe - there are many, many men in the world like dear, honest, simple Joe; and I'm very glad of it, and I'm going to do my best from here on out to appreciate them instead of being like arrogant Pip. Because Joe might have been a very common type of man; but in reality, he was the rarest gem of all.
- Miss Havisham. She is terrifying. She is insane. She is WAY creepier in the book than in the movie.
- Estella. I never knew that Estella was as heartless as they made her appear in the movies, but she is! And worse!
- Biddy. I hope I can be like Biddy someday ... she also is sweet and gentle and modest.
- Pip. I don't like Pip very much, but he did remind me a lot of a Robert Louis Stevenson character, which was interesting.
Uh-oh, I'd better run or I'm going to be late ...
Love,
Vicki
Hey there!
ReplyDeleteI have picked up that book (it's on our bookshelf downstairs!) multiple times and yet never read it. I shall have to change that!
Try reading "Oliver Twist" by Dickens. It is one of my favorite books.
Blessings friend!
Frannie