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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Hi Druthilla
You dont have to buy them all - google project gutenberg and you will get sites which have digital versions of all Dickens Books
I already have Bleak House and couldnt stand the idea of buying another one because I couldnt find the first.
Great expex, Nic Nic, Oliver Twist ?
DOnt forget Trollops and Thackeray as contemporaries
Oh and dont forget the Beeb adaptations.
Quilp was played by Patrick Troughton in one - he was later a very popular Dr WHo......
And Gordon Gostelow as Newman Noggs in Nic Nic. Very thin and gangly in a stovepipe hat. Newman Noggs throws a copperplate dip pen as a dart, which sticks into the door post that Ralph Nickleby has gone out of, and my Dad commented that the kids in his class (1910) did exactly that during ink fights at school.
And Drusilla,
Don't know about libraries in your neck of the woods but I LOVE libraries!
Ok, it can be difficult to get something obscure, but surely you would be easily able to find copies of Dicken's classics - and a lot cheaper than buying.
Why not give libraries another chance - they have improved dramatically here recently (even open on Sunday's now so I can browse at my leisure).
Dickens' own favourite was David Copperfield, and although it is fiction, it is quite strongly autobiographical.
You're right about the way in which characters are 'cartoonish' - he wrote many of his works as magazine serials and had to give them striking and memorable characteristics so readers would quickly recall which ones they were when they picked up next month's issue. This often means that they make great films, with characters that are just slightly over the top. There are good films of Oliver Twist (and also the musical Oliver) and Great Expectations; a couple of Nicholas Nickleby (there was also a splendid RSC stage adaptation of this 20 years ago - went on for about 8 hours - I think this is also available on DVD) and any number of Christmas Carols - my favourite is the Alastair Sim one. There was a terrific Copperfield years ago with WC Fields but it is seldom shown anywhere and is I think unavailable on video.... sorry, I know you were really asking about books.
Going back to the original statement about buying books for your daughters, why not buy the girls a Dickens novel each at the same time as you buy yours and then borrow them to read yourself ?
Though it's not strictly a novel, I'd recommend A Child's History of England. Also try the Christmas Stories, which are short stories including A Christmas Carol and other ghost stories.