There are dark shadows on the earth, but its lights are stronger in the contrast.
I started reading The Pickwick Papers way back in March 2016, and just finished it in
November 2017, but this long read is NOT because I am a slow reader. I read The Pickwick Papers as part of a 20
month read along, hosted by On Bookes, to commemorate the 180th
anniversary of the first publication; it was published serially beginning in
March 1836, 2-3 chapters a month, with no installment in May 2017. It was
Dickens’ first novel, published under the pseudonym “Boz”.
First, thanks to On Bookes for hosting this unusual
and fun read along. I am happy I stuck with it to the end. On Bookes researched
and posted bits of trivia regarding what was going on in London as each
installment came out – creating the feeling that we were reading it like the
original readers. My understanding, that around chapter 10, and the
introduction of Mr. Pickwick’s valet Sam Weller, The Pickwick Papers became perhaps the first great publishing
phenomenon ever.
The
Pickwick Papers is a farcical romp, definitely
the most comic of any work by Dickens I’ve read. In short, it is the story of
Samuel Pickwick, founder of The Pickwick Club, London 1827. Pickwick is a man
with a “gigantic brain” and a passion for science, philosophy, art, and adventure,
who according to his own description is “an observer of human nature”.
The Pickwick club, commissions Pickwick and three
companions to set out upon a quest of sorts, to pursue adventure and discovery
and to record said adventures for posterity. Pickwick’s three companions, Mr.
Tracy Tupman, Mr. Augustus Snodgrass, and Mr. Nathaniel Winkle are each known
for one particular passion which is their unique distinction: Tupman for an
admiration for the fair sex, Snodgrass as a poet, and Winkle as a sportsman.
These four receive hearty approval and commission from their fellow Pickwickians
and set out in pursuit of the greater glory of The Pickwick Club.
The Pickwickians are all very decent chaps at
heart, but all are a bit bombastic and Dickens delights in bringing them down a
notch or two by ironic twists of fate and the clumsy do-goodery of the troop. I’ve
alluded to one other principal character, Mr. Sam Weller, Pickwick’s valet. Sam
is worldly wise and fiercely loyal to Pickwick and as you might imagine, more
than once saves Pickwick and/or colleagues from embarrassing situation.
Of course, all comes right in the end. As Mr.
Pickwick settles into a leisurely retirement, Dickens writes:
Let us leave our old friend in one of those moments of unmixed happiness, of which, if we seek them, there are ever some, to cheer our transitory existence here. There are dark shadows on the earth, but its lights are stronger in the contrast. Some men, like bats or owls, have better eyes for the darkness than for the light. We, who have no such optical powers, are better pleased to take our last parting look at the visionary companions of many solitary hours, when the brief sunshine of the world is blazing full upon them.
Although I enjoyed the read along format, this is not
my favorite Dickens, but I can see how the
serialization, and the resulting cliff-hangers would have created excitement
and anticipation. There were a few months, when after finishing the allotted
installment, I was tempted to read ahead. I never did though…Honest!
My rating: 3 ½ of 5 stars
Trivia – near the beginning of Little Women by
Louisa May Alcott, the March girls are acting out scenes from The Pickwick
Papers.
I have never read any Victorian novel in that way, though I have been tempted. I know that other blogs/vlogs have done similarly with Middlemarch, Our Mutual Friend, etc.
ReplyDeleteIf you were itching to read ahead occasionally, just think how the reader in 1837 may have felt!
I love Dickens and what I think I liked best about this book is how it showed the reader "future" Dickens in that there are bits and pieces in Pickwick that are further expounded upon in later novels.
Yes, I'm sure, and I've read, the readers were clamoring for the next edition. One thing that stood out to me as very Dickenesque was when the narrator (Dickens of course) would offer some commentary just dripping with sarcasm.
DeleteOf all the Dickens I have not read, this is the one I am most looking forward to. Partly because it's in Little Women and partly because it sounds funny. And partly because so many people tell me I would like it. I will get to it eventually!
ReplyDeletePretty sure you'll enjoy it.
DeleteI envy you for reading Pickwick Papers strictly to the publication date! I have joined the challenge last year, but something happened that I needed to read something funny and witty (and I just could not put this book down). So... I have read it but not as planned. But this is the kind of books that I'd love to reread someday, maybe then I'd do the challenge myself. :)
ReplyDeleteGood job for you, Joseph, congrats!
Thanks Fanda.
DeleteI am ashamed to admit that I have yet to read Dickens. I wanted to start with Bleak House, but how fun this must have been to participate in this readalong, and as you mentioned, similar to how the original readers would have engaged in it. I have missed out!
ReplyDeleteYeah...but I wouldn't necessarily suggest this as a good starting point for Dickens. IMO A Tale of Two Cities is his greatest achievement, but the consensus says David Copperfield. I haven't read Bleak house, but I understand it is excellent...so probably a good start.
DeleteAh, i wish I’d known about this, it sounds like so much fun!!
ReplyDeleteWe'll probably do it again in 2036 for the 200th anniversary. You can join in then ;) Sorry we missed you this time.
DeleteI love Pickwick, more from nostalgia, I think, than anything else. I enjoy Sam Weller, and the roaming around England and the parties and food and misadventures, but mostly I love it because it was one of the first non-kids books that I read as a young teen and enjoyed talking about it with my older brother, Mark, who recommended it to me.
ReplyDeleteThat's a great memory. I love to hear of parents and children sharing reading....but brothers and sisters is even more rare, though this is the second such memory I've read about this week. Thanks for sharing.
DeleteThat sounds like a great, leisurely way to roll along with Mr Pickwick and the gang. I read and reviewed it this January as my first book in the Classics Challenge. I could sense Dickens' youthful voice coming through, and that was before I realised he was only 24 at the time of writing. It's a great story to have read, and I can understand how Sam Weller helped his author become a celebrity :)
ReplyDeleteYeah, I've wondered if he originally intended Sam to be so prominent, or if he realized Sam's popularity and then developed him a bit more. Either way...it worked out good.
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