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Great Expectations

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Great Expectations
 
 
 
 
 
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User Review

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22 out of 22 people found this review helpful.

I've Had GREATER EXPECTATIONS From A Dick...

Date of Review: Nov 2, 2003

The Bottom Line:  If you like Dickens' other work, you'll more than likely enjoy this classic. Just don't expect it to be his best.
Great expectations was first published in a newspaper over a space of weeks. that's while you'll find in different chapters that it seems like dickens is reminding you of the characters, because after a week, people forgot different characters.

it's an odd novel, because each character changes throughout it. you'd never think that someone you liked so much in the beginning could become someone you don't like further on in the novel, or vice versa, but that actually happens often in the book with most characters.

a story of a young boy from rags to riches has been read thousands of times in the century and a half it's been around, televised many times, and is still thought as one of dickens' best work.

**the plot**

pip hasn't had the best of lives. his mother, his father, and all but one of his brother and sisters have passed away. he lives with his sister, and his sister's husband – mr and mrs joe gargery – in a small village.

pip is brought to us like a sweet, innocent and normal little boy. his real name being philip pirrip, he admits on the first page, he couldn't get his tongue round his real name, and the only thing that came out was pip!

mrs joe is probably one of the wickedest women in literature at that time. in books around the 19th century, women in books were sweet and innocent. cooked the meals, did the cleaning, and the men were supposed to be nasty to them.

but, in great expectations mrs joe beats her husband, and her helpless brother pip. she mocks them nastily, and all readers are made to hate her. dickens also brought another thing to us- fear from a man's point of view.

even though joe loves mrs joe, he fears her very much, and in every other book at that time, the man was the tough guy, and rarely ever feared anyone; let alone his wife. even though she rarely raised a finger to him, she did at times, and at that time, it was though, as right to hit your wife if necessary, but Joe didn't do it; not once.

The novel begins very suddenly, with the main story brought to us in the first 10 pages. Pip often goes to the graveyard to visit his mother, father's and his brother and sister's graves. Mrs Joe doesn't like him going up there, so he sneaks up whilst he can.

When he's there, he sees a tall, well built, ugly man. This man picks Pip up, and dangles him upside down. Clearly Pip is very scared at this point, not knowing who he is, or even why he's actually doing this.

It turns out the man is an escaped convict, and he is after food.
"If you don't get me food, I will get my friend, who's much tougher and scarier than me, to kill you. He'll slit your throat open." The man tells Pip.
"Yes, sir… sir… yes." Pip answers.

He gets food for him, and keeps taking it to him, but soon his sister begins to realise food is going missing. The police find the escaped convict in the end, but the convict knows how much Pip tried to help him.

And here the story begins. What's odd about this novel is, I presume it's because it was printed in the newspaper, it has numerous stories in it. It doesn't stick to one main plot, but has many with different characters.

Also, one of the other main plots is Pip's adoration for Estella, a young girl who lives with a strange woman in one of the biggest houses in their village. He meets Estella, when he goes to see Miss Havisham…

Miss Havisham hasn't set foot outside her house since her wedding day many years ago. She remains in her wedding dress, has kept the house how it was on the day, and stopped the clocks at the time she was jilted.

Joe forces Pip to go up there, when Miss Havisham request company for her and her niece Estella. When Pip enters the odd house, he becomes engrossed with Miss Havisham's lifestyle straight away.

At first he's scared. A haggard old woman, in a wedding dress, now faded to a yellow colour, which hasn't seen the light of day in decades is requesting him to play cards with her.

When he meets Estella who's a tall, attractive, blonde girl he falls in love with her immediately. Like his sister, Mrs Joe, Estella is horrible to Pip treating him like dirt. It seems Miss Havisham encourages this, as she has so much hate for men after she was jilted.

After a while it becomes less of love between Pip and Estella, but more like an obsession Pip has with her. He knows she hates him, but can't help but love her when he visits.

Pip is the only person, apart from Estelle, who has seen Miss Havisham since she was jilted. So, when Pip returns home everyone questions him what Miss Havisham is like, and just to annoy him or her, he lies about her.

Pip carries on visiting Miss Havisham for many years, and we see him growing up from a young boy to a boy, and then a teenage boy. Throughout this time he still adores Estella, and never forgets her after she leaves to Paris.

But, when Pip leaves the little village when he is becoming a man, to live in London, where he is expected to have "Great Expectations". And here is where Pip's character changes, where the darker side comes out, and the full story unravels…

**My Opinion**

I have so many strong views on Great Expectations. Dickens, I feel, has done so many things to make us think about what he's writing, and to create a certain characters personality.

At the beginning of the novel, when the escaped convict says:
"If you don't get me food, I will get my friend, who's much tougher and scarier than me, to kill you. He'll slit your throat open."
I can't help but see that the convict is saying a "friend" will kill Pip.

This makes me think, that the convict has a soft side to him, and that he's not capable of killing him, that he doesn't really want to hurt Pip at all, he just wants food, and is threatening him for that reason only. But, he's such a nice person, that he can't even threaten him by saying he'll kill him.

Even though he says his friend will cut his throat, which is a very brutal thing to do, he still keeps on saying that a friend will do it, and not once does "I" come out of his mouth when he's threatening Pip.

Pip's character changed a lot in the novel, and to think Dickens made you like him so much in the beginning of the novel, it was very clever the way he managed to make you not like him as much nearing the end.

When he was beginning to be ashamed of Joe, it was such strong writing, he made us think twice about how much you actually liked Pip, and whether you still liked him. It showed how a lavish lifestyle can change someone.

When Pip was at home in his small village, it was lovely to read how pleased he was to go to London, and how much of a joy it was for him; he was so thankful to be going.

Then, after a few years in London we get to see how he changes, and how something he'd be so thankful for before, now he didn't really care and expected these to be given to him, and that he wasn't lucky to be getting these things at all, but he deserved these things he got, which certainly isn't the right attitude.

What I found extremely good writing on Dickens' front as well was how he never told us Pip's sisters name. She was always referred to as Mrs Joe, and we didn't find out her real name in the book.

What I found so fantastic about this was the way that Dickens managed to create her character secretly. Even though, he always described her evil and horrible, I think the fact he didn't name her, made me feel that she wasn't as evil as Dickens tried to make out.

It seems she's been hiding behind Mr Joe's character and she isn't allowed her own personality, even though she rules the roost at home, she isn't allowed a name of her own.

I feel Mrs Joe isn't as wicked as Dickens makes out. She does some awful things in the novel, but when you think of it, look what she gone through. Her parents died, and she had to take care for her brothers and sisters. Then most of them died, and only she and her brother remained.

In her life she has had to deal with deaths of her loved ones, and other worries as well. I presume that she wasn't always as wicked as she was made out in the novel. Even though she shouldn't have beaten Pip, and sometimes, Joe, I think she only did it to make herself feel better and to get noticed, because she probably got no recognition for what she did for her family.

The way Dickens describes Miss Havisham and her house is fantastic in the novel. I think I've only ever seen such good description, with use of adjectives, metaphors, similes, personifications in one other novel in my life, and that is in Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights.

He shows us how hurt Miss Havisham was when she was jilted, and how all her pain has been locked up all these years, and how cold it has turned her. It seems that Miss Havisham has made Estella hate Pip because he's a man, and she hates men for what has happened to her.

With Miss Havisham and Mrs Joe, it seems there's a resemblance in their character's Two are women, and even though they've come from different backgrounds, they've had to deal with an awful lot, and have had no thanks or recognition.

Dickens created a different kind of women in Great Expectations. He modernised the women in his novel, and you wouldn't have seen any other women behave like that in those sort of novels at that time.

What I didn't like in the novel was, in some parts I felt he didn't describe places as much as he could. For instance, Pip's flat in London, we found out very little about it, and he didn't really describe it well.

Today we have televised version's that create the picture for us, but back then, it had to be made in the readers' imaginations, and I felt Dickens could've done that, because he did it so well in earlier stages of the book.

Dickens managed to tell us things that seemed irrelevant, but later on in the book, we'd see why he mentioned those things and they seemed so clear and so clever to have thought of them!

I wouldn't say that Dickens is one of the best writers of all time, but Great Expectations is a good read, and has so many twist and turns you feel you're on a rollercoaster! He really manages to keep you gripped, and even though it's a long read, at the end you'll feel satisfied and shocked.

**All in all**

Even though I enjoyed Dickens writing here, I have read better books than this. I don't think this would turn up in my top 10 books, but it's a good read for a rainy afternoon, and also a good one to read over a space of time. A very clever plot, and very clever writing.

You can buy the book from Amazon for a mere #1,50 from the Penguin classics and the audio book, also from Penguin classics, for #7,19.

Written By: Matt Roberts for Epinions.com

  4.0

by: mattroberts
Recommended to buy: Yes

Pros
Good plot, and writing.
Cons
In some places there's too much description, and lack of it in other places.
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