Tuesday, 14 November 2017

Barnaby Rudge - worth the effort!

Barnaby Rudge, by Charles Dickens is a book I knew nothing about except for the title. It is certainly not one of his better known books and is a little different to the other works of his that I have read. It is set against the backdrop of the Gordon Riots of 1780, an event I also knew nothing about. There are many characters, which is par for the course with Dickens, but they are all clearly drawn and I certainly didn't get as confused as I have done in previous works. The action centres around three families - the Haredales (Geoffrey and his niece Emma), the Chesters (Sir John and his son Edward) and the Vardens (locksmith Gabriel, his wife and his daughter Dolly). Their lives are intertwined by love, hatred and tragedy. Within the same orbit, lives Barnaby Rudge, a simple young man whose mother is desperate to protect him from the cruelty of the world. When a strange man calls on them, she flees in an effort to protect Barnaby, but nowhere is safe from this man, and this event marks the beginning of a downward spiral for Barnaby. Along with most of London, all our characters are engulfed by the wave of anti-Catholic feeling being promoted by Lord George Gordon and his followers. Barnaby is duped into joining the ensuing mob and is caught up in the resulting riots. There is so much going on in this book, but it is all expertly tied together - although it sometimes takes a little while to see how. There isn't as much comic relief here as there is in other works, with only Miggs - the servant of the Vardens - being the one truly silly character. The passages about the riots and especially the burning of Newgate prison are epic. And, as you would expect, there are some great characters who display every side of the human condition. It is serious and long, but I thought it was definitely worth the effort - although it might have helped that I read the audio edition narrated by the glorious Sean Barrett!

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 800 print pages.
Price I paid: £3.86.
Formats available: print, unabridged audio download, mp3 CD, ebook.

No comments:

Post a Comment