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Barnaby Rudge (Fireside Dickens)
Barnaby Rudge (Fireside Dickens) | Charles Dickens
19 posts | 19 read | 17 to read
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Ruthiella
Barnaby Rudge | Dickens Charles
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The Dickens title was a gift but the Martin Amis and Robin Hobb books are the result of a Goodwill donation I made today...I decided to take a quick look around before I left and bought them. Luckily I only had $5 in me or the “damage “ might‘ve been worse 😬

34 likes2 comments
review
toofondofbooks
Barnaby Rudge | Dickens Charles
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Pickpick

Set against the backdrop of the Gordon Riots of 1780, this is Dickens's first historical novel and one of his lesser known. I can't understand why though after reading it bc it was an excellent book. As always, Dickens puts forth a cast of characters that the reader follows throughout the story loving some and hating others. Public violence, gothic leanings and family secrets make this a most excellent read. #litsyclassics #Dickens

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ladyonequestion
Barnaby Rudge | Dickens Charles
Mehso-so

Glad I read this but it wasn't my favourite Dickens, so far that has to be Nicholas Nickleby. I think Dickens was still experimenting with genres at this point, and the story lacks some of the vivid characters he was so famous for. Nevertheless, an interesting dip into the waters of a historic event I don't know all that much about.

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KVanRead
Barnaby Rudge | Dickens Charles
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#DickensianDecember I had to look this one up. #LordGeorgeGordon gave his name to the Gordon Riots of 1780 featured in Barnaby Rudge. I haven‘t read this one yet. @jenniferw88

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Libby1
Barnaby Rudge | Dickens Charles
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Pickpick

Historical fiction mixed with gothic melodrama.

The first half of the book needed a brutal trim of about 200 pages. Once the story hit the Gordon Riots of London in 1780 it was fascinating.

Barnaby Rudge is a difficult book to assess, just like its eponymous character. Barnaby is a young adult with intellectual disabilities, yet he is complex. The Gordon Riots were against Catholics, and were horrifying and absurd.

An odd, troubling book.

Libby1 @IWriteInTheNight , @Lcsmcat , @Kelican17 , @HannaPolkadots , @rohit-sawant , @Brooke_H , @KVanRead , @ClairesReads , @batsy - each of you added this book to your TBR. It was a curious one. Feel free to chat with me if you‘d like to know more! 7y
ClairesReads @Libby1 I've actually read this one before- I'm a bit of a Dickens fanatic...agree it starts slowly. 7y
rockpools Nice review! You've *almost* convinced me to give it a try 😉(I struggle with Dickens!) ... But ❤️ that mini chest-of-drawers! 7y
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KVanRead Interesting! I‘m definitely going to have to read it at some point. Thanks for the tag and the thoughtful review. 7y
Libby1 I read at least one Dickens book each year, @ClairesReads . It‘s usually a September tradition. I adore him for the most part, especially his heart for the poor and oppressed. This may be difficult to answer, but do you have a favourite of his works? 7y
Libby1 Thanks, @RachelO . I think this one is a bit of a difficult one. If his books aren‘t usually your cup of tea I‘d probably try another one. 🙄 7y
Libby1 Thanks, @KVanRead 💕 7y
ClairesReads @Libby1 I'll always have a soft spot for Great Expectations because it's the first one I read- but I love most 7y
ClairesReads I'm also trying to reread one a year at least at the moment! 7y
Libby1 @ClairesReads - I adore Bleak House and A Christmas Carol. I still have a few more to read ! 7y
ClairesReads @Libby1 ooo Bleak House is another good one! 7y
Brooke_H Will do! I added because it‘s one of the few Dickenses I haven‘t read! 7y
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Libby1
Barnaby Rudge | Dickens Charles
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From the Introduction:

“All writing has a ghostly quality, conjuring up the presence of of things when there is nothing there, but historical novels, particularly one as haunted as Barnaby Rudge, provide a peculiarly intense version of this experience, a story of ghosts of ghosts of ghosts.”

👻👻👻

TriciaO I love seasonal reading! 7y
Libby1 I didn‘t intend for this to happen, @TriciaO ! 7y
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Libby1
Barnaby Rudge | Dickens Charles
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“Having made this communication, and furthermore thanked Heaven with great fervour and heartiness, the good lady, according to the custom of matrons on all occasions of excitement, fainted away directly.”

Sigh.

#MisogynyMinute

julesG Ugh! 7y
Tamra Its so cliche I snorted out loud. 7y
Laura317 Well, to be fair, she might have had a tight corset on, but STILL!...🙄 7y
DivaDiane The dated syntax adds to the comedy. But ugh. 7y
Libby1 @julesG , @Tamra , @Laura317 , @DivaDiane - there was actually a further instance of misogyny near the end of the book that was so startling and laughable I didn‘t even share. I‘ll leave it is a surprise for the maybe 5 people this year who may read this neglected classic. 7y
58 likes5 comments
quote
Libby1
Barnaby Rudge | Dickens Charles
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“I have had my share of sorrows - more than the common lot, perhaps - but I have borne them ill. I have broken where I should have bent; and have mused and brooded, when my spirit should have mixed with all God‘s great creation. The men who learn endurance, are they who call the whole world, brother. I have turned from the world, and I pay the penalty.”

This is challenging.

Cathythoughts I really like this quote. I think I will be learning to "roll with the punches" until my dying day. It's hard !!! (edited) 7y
Libby1 Yes, @Cathythoughts , it is. I found this personally challenging and could relate to it a bit too much. I hope you‘re keeping safe. 7y
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Libby1
Barnaby Rudge | Dickens Charles
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This article on the BBC website tells the story of how CD‘s pet raven, Grip, may have inspired other works of art, including Pope‘s The Raven.

Grip also appears as a character in Barnaby Rudge.

Thanks for bringing this story to my attention, @TobeyTheScavengerMonk and @rohit-sawant .

TobeyTheScavengerMonk This is great! 7y
RohitSawant Awesome! Didn't know the raven's name was Grip! 7y
70 likes3 comments
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Libby1
Barnaby Rudge | Dickens Charles
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IT GOT WORSE.

“Do what she would, she only looked better for it and tempted them the more. When her eyes flashed angrily, and her ripe lips slightly parted, to give her rapid breathing vent, who could resist it?”

It goes downhill from there.

I have never liked Dickens‘s depiction of women but this is the worst by far.

It‘s not #MisogynyMinute it‘s more like #MisogynyHour .

Balibee146 😫😫😤😤 7y
Aleida Bleeeeeecccchhhh😖 7y
Libby1 I couldn‘t believe how bad it was, @Balibee146 and @Aleida . I‘ve read a lot of his work so I know he‘s not a paragon of feminism but this was scraping the bottom of the barrel. 7y
55 likes3 comments
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Libby1
Barnaby Rudge | Dickens Charles
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“Beautiful, bewitching, captivating little (female character) - her hair disheveled, her dress torn, her dark eyelashes wet with tears, her bosom heaving - her face, now pale with fear, now crimsoned with indignation - her whole self a hundred times more beautiful in this heightened aspect than she had ever been before...”

Seriously, Dickens? The woman is in fear for her life and you focus on her heaving bosom?

FAIL.

#MisogynyMinute

Balibee146 Yuk! Good call 👍👍 7y
quietlycuriouskate I want to shake him by the shoulders but as my pale complexion is probably crimsoned with indignation too he'd doubtless just get a few more paragraphs out of it. 😤 7y
Libby1 @Balibee146 and @River_Voice - and he‘d probably write something that made it sound like a woman‘s fear of getting raped is somehow attractive. 😡 7y
52 likes3 comments
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Libby1
Barnaby Rudge | Dickens Charles
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This is a prison scene in Barnaby Rudge.

It‘s so much worse when animals are sad, isn‘t it?

TobeyTheScavengerMonk Didn't Dickens have a pet raven? Am I remembering this correctly? 7y
RohitSawant @TobeyTheScavengerMonk He did, and I recall reading somewhere that it was one of the inspirations behind Poe's "The Raven." Can't believe there isn't a raven emoji... 7y
Libby1 @TobeyTheScavengerMonk and @rohit-sawant - yes! You‘re both right! I found an article about this that I‘ll share. 7y
51 likes3 comments
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Libby1
Barnaby Rudge | Dickens Charles
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Trying to read Barnaby Rudge in a noisy Belfast burrito bar.

Olé!

LeahBergen I'd like to be in a noisy Belfast burrito bar right now! 7y
Libby1 I wish you‘d been there, too, @LeahBergen ! 😃 7y
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Libby1
Barnaby Rudge | Dickens Charles
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Barnaby and his dreams.

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Libby1
Barnaby Rudge | Dickens Charles
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Really, Charles Dickens?

Tamra 😂 7y
Mamashep Oh how I love Dickens and his character names! 7y
MayJasper Brilliant 7y
LeahBergen Say what now? 😆 7y
Libby1 @Tamra , @Mamashep , @MayJasper , @LeahBergen - I expected some ridiculous names but this one takes the cake. 7y
53 likes5 comments
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Libby1
Barnaby Rudge | Dickens Charles
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"That what we falsely call a religious cry is easily raised by men [and women] who have no religion, and who in their daily practice set at nought the commonest principles of right and wrong; that it is begotten of intolerance and persecution; that it is senseless, besotted, inveterate, and unmerciful; all History teaches us."

Moray_Reads Dickens was so wise in many ways (and unwise in many others, but the point still stands!) 7y
Tamra Perfect! 7y
KVanRead I'm constantly struck, and a little bummed by how much of Dickens social commentary is still relevant today. 7y
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drokka Just as valuable a statement today as it was then. 7y
Libby1 @Moray_Reads , @Tamra , @KVanRead , @drokka - Dickens was a deeply gifted and deeply flawed human being. I read one of his books every September. I'm making a late start on it this year but I couldn't decide which one to read. I believe this one is the most obscure and I know nothing about the plot, so it will be an adventure! 7y
drokka I haven't read this one or his American Tales, but have found that everything he has written still resonates strongly today. I wonder if he ever considered that, for the most part, his work could easily be transplanted 150 years later and have meaning. That would go for any of the classic authors I guess. 7y
Libby1 @drokka - I think I still have 7 more of his books to go. I think his books are classics because he was such a keen observer of human behaviour. I do have to admit, though, that I find his female characters to be weak, cloying, and completely unrealistic. The humour and heart for the poor and dispossessed are what make me love his work. 7y
43 likes2 stack adds7 comments
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Libby1
Barnaby Rudge | Dickens Charles
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About to start this big beast before picking up the child from school in an hour.

I'm twitchy and indecisive and sad today and was beating myself up about this a bit. Then I remembered the cat just died a couple of days ago. We need to be kind to ourselves, don't we?

SauerPatch Always 💜 Enjoy your time! 7y
RealBooks4ever *hugs* 💜 7y
OrangeMooseReads sorry about your kitty. Yes we do need to give ourselves more love and room to be sad when we need to be. 7y
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Tamra 😞 Sad is ok. 7y
quietlycuriouskate Yes, we need to be kind to ourselves. It's really sad about your cat. I was devastated when my dear old tabby died. Be gentle with yourself. 💚 7y
Librariana Of course you do! I am so very sorry to learn about your kitty passing over the Rainbow Bridge 😔 I think at times like this... when we're greaving or sad, it's important to be gentle with ourselves... to give ourselves the room to be vulnerable and sensitive 💜 7y
WhatDeeReads Yes, we all need to be kinder to ourselves. 7y
DivineDiana Take care. Go slowly. Love yourself. ❤️ 7y
JacqMac Take care of you. ❤️ 7y
rubyslippersreads I'm so sorry to hear about your kitty. This is definitely a time to be good to yourself. ❤️ 7y
DrexEdit Be careful with you 💜 7y
AmyG I am sorry for your loss. Losing a pet is so heartbreaking. 7y
LeahBergen Aww. Hugs. 💕 7y
Libby1 @Tamra 🕊 7y
Libby1 @AmyG 🕊 7y
70 likes26 comments
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Libby1
Barnaby Rudge | Dickens Charles
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I want these book cases. And the wallpaper. 🤤

The tagged book has nothing to do with beautiful wall displays. I will be starting it today so it will be my #CurrentRead .

tricours I wanted to have shelves floating on the wall for my books until I learned what that would cost to avoid the risk of their weight tearing said wall down 😒 7y
Libby1 I never thought about that, @tricours ! 😬 7y
78 likes2 comments
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Libby1
Barnaby Rudge | Dickens Charles
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My Dickens Read 2017 has been selected!

Each year for the last number of years I've chosen a Dickens novel to read every September. I may not finish it this month but I will try.

Do you have any bookish routines or traditions?

I was sold on this one by the blurb on the back cover that calls it "a powerful, disturbing blend of historical realism and Gothic melodrama".

Bring it ON!

#ReadingTheClassics
#DickensInSeptember

TobeyTheScavengerMonk Horror all October long and a Doctor Who novel every November. 7y
batsy Ooh that does sound good! Both the book and the tradition! 7y
Hoopiefoot I read Steinbeck every year in November for some reason. 7y
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awishman I reread Pride and Prejudice every new year! 7y
Notafraidofwords I've never read dickens. I'm intimidated. 7y
Libby1 @Notafraidofwords - I can understand that. I like him but his stuff can be a bit heavy. If you're ever tempted to try him I'd recommend A Christmas Carol first. Happy reading! 😃 7y
Libby1 @awishman - that's fun! Do you read it at any particular time of year? 7y
Libby1 @Hoopiefoot - I may make November my month for Steinbeck, too! Great idea. I've only read of Mice and Men and The Pearl so far so there are many left to choose from. 7y
Libby1 That's fun, @TobeyTheScavengerMonk ! I've not read any Doctor Who novels. Do you have a favourite? 7y
Libby1 Thanks, @batsy ! ⭐️ 7y
awishman @Libby1 it's always January 1st-ish. It's always the first book I finish every year. 7y
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