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A tale of two cities / Charles Dickens.

By: Dickens, Charles.
Contributor(s): Hunt, Gillian [illustrator].
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPlace of publication: OxfordPublisher: Macmillan HeinemannDate of publication: 2005Description: 63 pages : illustrated, 19 cm.ISBN: 978-1-4050-7224.Subject(s): France -- History -- Revolution, 1789-1799 -- FictionDDC classification: 823.8 D554t 2005 Summary: The most famous and possibly the most popular of Dickens' novels, A Tale of Two Cities shows a master of dramatic narrative extracting gold from the ore of history. If the bloody tableau of the French Revolution were not in itself sufficient for a dozen novels, Dickens added to it a professional resurrectionist, an authentic ogress, and an antihero as convincingly flawed as any in modern literature. Here, too, are all Dickens' recurring themes - imprisonment, injustice, and cataclysmic violence, resurrection and the renunciation that makes renewal possible. - From the back cover
Item type Current location Collection Call number Vol info Status Date due
Books Books High School Department
Reading Area (Main - HS)
800-899 Literature 823.8 D554t 2005 (Browse shelf) no. 16224 Available
Browsing High School Department Shelves , Shelving location: Reading Area (Main - HS) , Collection code: 800-899 Literature Close shelf browser
823.8 D554d 2012 David Copperfield / 823.8 D554g Great expectations / 823.8 D554t 1997 A tale of two cities / 823.8 D554t 2005 A tale of two cities / 823.8 El41 1956 Middlemarch / 823.8 El41 1993 Silas Marner / 823.8 H2222 1993 Wordsworth classics :

The most famous and possibly the most popular of Dickens' novels, A Tale of Two Cities shows a master of dramatic narrative extracting gold from the ore of history. If the bloody tableau of the French Revolution were not in itself sufficient for a dozen novels, Dickens added to it a professional resurrectionist, an authentic ogress, and an antihero as convincingly flawed as any in modern literature. Here, too, are all Dickens' recurring themes - imprisonment, injustice, and cataclysmic violence, resurrection and the renunciation that makes renewal possible.

- From the back cover

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