site hit counter

[HRL]⋙ PDF Gratis DOMBEY AND SON annotated edition by Charles Dickens Literature Fiction eBooks

DOMBEY AND SON annotated edition by Charles Dickens Literature Fiction eBooks



Download As PDF : DOMBEY AND SON annotated edition by Charles Dickens Literature Fiction eBooks

Download PDF DOMBEY AND SON annotated  edition by Charles Dickens Literature  Fiction eBooks

The Dombey and Son by Charles Dickens – a timeless literary masterpiece of the Victorian era – has captivated millions of hearts and minds of readers for a century and a half all over the world.

This unique edition includes dedicated author’s biography, novel synopsis, historical context, little knows facts, contemporary critique and illustrations. This edition is also carefully formatted for comfortable reading.

The novel tells a story of Mr Paul Dombey who owns a shipping company, and has a son and daughter (Paul and Florence). Paul is often ill, but very attached to his older sister Florence. There is a plot to arrange a marriage for Mr Dombey. There is love and hate, ups and downs, friendship and malice, the good and the bad. A change in the society related to the boom of railways and dying of seafaring way of life is also one of the major themes of the book. Many more characters are introduced into the plot, making it a fascinating and moving novel.

‘Dombey and Son’ was first published in instalments between years 1846-1848.

Charles Dickens was born in 1812 and died in 1870. He left a legacy of magnificent novels that are still very popular with readers.

DOMBEY AND SON annotated edition by Charles Dickens Literature Fiction eBooks

Since the featured positive review (from 2004) recommends Dombey and Son as "a good place to start" reading Dickens, I find that I must protest. Dombey and Son is surely one of the least appealing of his many novels. I've read most of them, and I would certainly recommend starting with one of the shorter, tighter, more inviting novels such as Great Expectations or A Tale of Two Cities.

Dombey and Son is, I fear, exactly the kind of novel that prevents people from reading Dickens and other "classics." Overlong, filled with long passages of moralizing prose, painfully slow-moving at times, sentimental, relatively humorless (strikingly so, for Dickens), and, I regret to say, often boring. If I had started here, I doubt that I would be interested in reading Dickens again. In my opinion, Dickens' best novel is Bleak House, but it is a monumental work, which might be too overwhelming for many modern-day readers without working up to it. However, if you don't think that you're likely to read more than one of his novels in your lifetime, that should, i believe, be the one. But not Dombey.

Does it have any merit? Of course it does! It's Dickens! Dickens was a genius, and all of his novels are worth reading. This, I fear has pushed aside my previous least favorite to take the very lowest rung of his works. If you have read most of his other works and wish, as I do, to be a completist, read it by all means. There are some lovely moments. But overall, it's a disappointment.

Product details

  • File Size 2597 KB
  • Print Length 656 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN 1974188612
  • Simultaneous Device Usage Unlimited
  • Publication Date July 24, 2013
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B00E5P7K7W

Read DOMBEY AND SON annotated  edition by Charles Dickens Literature  Fiction eBooks

Tags : DOMBEY AND SON (annotated) - Kindle edition by Charles Dickens. Download it once and read it on your Kindle device, PC, phones or tablets. Use features like bookmarks, note taking and highlighting while reading DOMBEY AND SON (annotated).,ebook,Charles Dickens,DOMBEY AND SON (annotated),FICTION Classics,FICTION Historical
People also read other books :

DOMBEY AND SON annotated edition by Charles Dickens Literature Fiction eBooks Reviews


This book is the beginning of Dickens' great novels. It's not as good as "Bleak House" or "Our Mutual Friend;" Dickens hasn't yet managed to let his characters talk, and he is a narrator who talks too much himself. The ironic humor of "Bleak House" is not yet quite within his grasp, and Florence Dombey has all the annoying characteristics of Miss Goody-Two-Shoes Esther Summerson. And low be it spoken, Dickens could have used an editor - or two, or three - in this novel. It's just too LONG.
Nonetheless, it's very clear that he's hitting his stride as the wonderful mythographer who makes the entire English-speaking world of the 19th century fall in love with his work.
It was a happy day when I, for whatever reason, elected to sample Charles Dickens. Having read A Tale of Two Cities in high school, I digressed to more popular fiction (Michener, Clavell, McMurtry, King, Grisham), as well as periods of science fiction and even non-fiction (Ambrose, McCollough for example), before making an effort to upgrade my reading list.

I read some Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky, Steinbeck and Hemingway with mixed success before reading Great Expectations. I liked it enough to read David Copperfield, and I was hooked. A Tale of Two Cities followed and then Oliver Twist (not my favorite), Bleak House, Nicholas Nickleby, Martin Chuzzlewit and The Pickwick Papers before taking on this door stop of a novel.

Many of Dickens’s works tend to be lengthy and excessively wordy, perhaps due to their nature of having been serialized prior to being printed in a single volume. Heretofore, I haven’t found that trait particularly annoying or troublesome, however this book proved to be an exception. I can usually read for a couple of hours before going to sleep, but found myself nodding off after only 20-30 minutes of Dombey. There are fantastic characters here, as in all of Dickens’s work, but they tend to be smothered by the frequently flowery and seemingly never ending prose.

As in other Dickens works, a period of acclimation is required to become comfortable with the vocabulary and social conventions of the era. Having read almost all of Dickens’s work, I would have to rank this as my least favorite.
My husband and I have just finished reading this book aloud together and I cannot say enough good things about it. Here Dickens deals with classism, racism, sexism, intellectualism, and environmentalism.  He deals with grace, forgiveness, and redemption. He is clearly a man ahead of his time.  And all is so artfully done, so emotionally satisfying. We were in tears reading one chapter and collapsing in gales of laughter in the next.  His character studies are no less than amazing. A fine, fine book. I fear most people will see a 950 page book and say, “No way,” but try a chapter a day. It wears well. You’ll be sorry when it ends.
Since the featured positive review (from 2004) recommends Dombey and Son as "a good place to start" reading Dickens, I find that I must protest. Dombey and Son is surely one of the least appealing of his many novels. I've read most of them, and I would certainly recommend starting with one of the shorter, tighter, more inviting novels such as Great Expectations or A Tale of Two Cities.

Dombey and Son is, I fear, exactly the kind of novel that prevents people from reading Dickens and other "classics." Overlong, filled with long passages of moralizing prose, painfully slow-moving at times, sentimental, relatively humorless (strikingly so, for Dickens), and, I regret to say, often boring. If I had started here, I doubt that I would be interested in reading Dickens again. In my opinion, Dickens' best novel is Bleak House, but it is a monumental work, which might be too overwhelming for many modern-day readers without working up to it. However, if you don't think that you're likely to read more than one of his novels in your lifetime, that should, i believe, be the one. But not Dombey.

Does it have any merit? Of course it does! It's Dickens! Dickens was a genius, and all of his novels are worth reading. This, I fear has pushed aside my previous least favorite to take the very lowest rung of his works. If you have read most of his other works and wish, as I do, to be a completist, read it by all means. There are some lovely moments. But overall, it's a disappointment.
Ebook PDF DOMBEY AND SON annotated  edition by Charles Dickens Literature  Fiction eBooks

0 Response to "[HRL]⋙ PDF Gratis DOMBEY AND SON annotated edition by Charles Dickens Literature Fiction eBooks"

Post a Comment