Paperback, 466 pages

English language

Published Jan. 10, 1963 by Washington Square Press.

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (2 reviews)

In this story of Pip, a young mon who means well but often does wrong, Charles Dickens has created what many critics consider his best novel. Great Expecta- lions hos a colorful range of characters and action without excess of detail. A dramatic, suspenseful plot replaces the episodic structure of the earlier novels. The sense of ploce and atmosphere is evocative and sharply defined.

All Dickens' books arc cnioyoble, all his characters memorable. He is perhaps the only novelist every English-speaking person is familiar with—and Great Expectations is the masterwork of this master story- teller.

162 editions

Review of 'Great Expectations' on 'Storygraph'

5 stars

5* from me.

So this is my first pirate romance (ever), and it delivered! I love Ramsay and I love Maren, and I read this off two lines quoted in some short video and knew nothing else about anything. Which was exactly the right way to read this, I think!

The pacing is really good, there is humor, it's frustrating sometimes (so angsty all around) but the characters' actions make sense. They talk about what is going on with them emotionally. Maybe not always instantly, but the fact that this doesnt have a lot of the miscommunication trope is a HUGE plus. It actually felt so much more real: sometimes you can tell what's up, sometimes you need a while to get the courage to speak. You grow, you leave things behind. 

Idk why this gripped me so much, but pretty sure that this detail sold me 100%, and I'm …

avatar for Danie@bookwyrm.social

rated it

3 stars