Have got the first Dickens book under my belt -
A Tale of Two Cities, written in 1859, which I read as an ebook. Probably the most famous start and end to any book - you will be familiar with the words "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times!". This sentiment could very much reflect our own world of today - with so much unrest in so many countries and rough justice rife. The big difference is no guillotine. Set in the years before and during the French revolution in both London and Paris, this epic story follows Doctor Manette - just released from the Bastille after many years of imprisonment - and rescued and brought back to England to recover by his daughter Lucie, and Mr Lorry - the quiet hero of Tellson's Bank (I know, a banker who is a hero ... maybe this couldn't be written in this day and age). Slowly restored to health and a semblance of normality, Doctor Manette is pleased to welcome Charles Darnay into their lives as his son-in-law, as well as the troubled figure of Sydney Carton who holds a torch for Lucie but does not feel worthy to do anything about it. Then comes the French Revolution, and Charles feels compelled to go back to his native France to try and help an old family servant ... and we realise that his name is not Darnay, but Evremonde - a member of a hated aristocratic family who he had turned his back on. This does not end well, and his family and friends try to save him from the guillotine - but Madame Defarge, demon knitter and hater of all aristocracy is determined to see the end of the Evremonde dynasty. It's epic, it's sentimental, it's brutal. There are some fantastic descriptive passages of the grime, and grim lives of the downtrodden peasants. It is a book that you have to spend time with - a few times I just read a few pages, and found myself getting a little lost, but if you have a bit of a run at it, you then find yourself sucked in and want to keep going. A good start for my Dickens year - it definitely makes me want to read more.

My STAR rating: FOUR
The stats: 371 print pages; free on the Kindle; also available in print and audio books (CD, MP3 and downloads),
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