

...
home
| art & architecture | books & cds | dance
| destinations | film | opera | television | theater | archives
|
||
culturevulture.net
Dickens reviews: |
To call Dickens' novels episodic is to beg the point;
most of them were, after all, written as serials for daily newspapers, as, indeed, was Nicholas
Nickleby. Dickens' genius was in the weaving of intriguing stories and the
depiction of a large assortment of individualized characters. The characters are drawn in
broad strokes of black and white (all virtue, all evil), something less than the depiction
of real-life complexities and ambiguities in shades of gray. But these are, nonetheless,
incisively etched personalities that capture the imagination and have pleased generations
of readers; many have become essential elements of Western literary mythology.