Favorite Author Review: Little Dorrit - Charles Dickens
A book that’s over 900 pages long can seem a bit daunting for most. But as usual with Dickens I don’t think the length is too much. The language is engaging and the story is interesting, so while the pages don’t fly by, they don’t drag on forever either. I think it really pays off in the end if you manage to forget about the page numbers. Dickens can be a bit wordy and longwinded sometimes, but it doesn’t happen too often, I think. The wordiness usually comes out, when he is explaining some part of the world the characters inhabit, like the doings (or not-doings) of the Circumlocution Office and the social rules of the various places in the story. When the plot is developing I find the language interesting and descriptive, without being too much. As for the plot of this book is it very intricate, as is usual for Dickens, I think. Seemingly unconnected characters come together in the end in unexpected, but not unbelievable ways. But it all begins with a man, Mr. Art...