So this is my proposition: What if we read both books? What if we alternate chapter by chapter and accidentally discover strange connections and inconsistencies between the novels? Already the Spooky Book Fates have been toying with the Pip link. Who knows?--perhaps Ahab and Magwitch, Ishmael and Pumblechook are next.
Anyway, if you hate this idea, tell me. If you like it, tell me. If you're indifferent, I suppose you can tell me too.
In sort of unrelated news, my essay about Charlotte Bronte's novel Shirley is out in the new issue of the Sewanee Review. This is probably her most underread novel (if you don't count The Professor, an early version of Villette that features a particularly nasty main character). Shirley is set in Yorkshire, and the plot centers around the weavers' uprisings against the mill owners and the interesting young ladies who are caught in the fray. But per usual, it also features Charlotte and her famous authorial interruptions. If you happen to have read this book, I'd like to hear what you have to say about it because, for some reason, it's turned out to be one that I reread often.
And now back to canning tomatoes, making bread, editing textbooks, and driving boys to soccer practice. Don't forget to write.
6 comments:
I'd be willing to read both whilst hoping I can keep everything straight!
I would also be willing to read both. It's been years since I read Great Expectations, and I'd look forward to getting reacquainted with it.
As for Shirley, that was a C.B. book that I loved (and still remember), and I am glad that someone else found it and loved it as well.
I love the idea of reading both.
sounds great!
I remember Shirley's whip. Doesn't she have one?
Yes, and a big dog!
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