A Tale Of Two Cities: A Reader's Companion

A Tale Of Two Cities: A Reader's Companion

by Susanne Alleyn
A Tale Of Two Cities: A Reader's Companion

A Tale Of Two Cities: A Reader's Companion

by Susanne Alleyn

eBook

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Overview

You’re reading A TALE OF TWO CITIES for the first time—or perhaps for the fourth or fifth time. But what are gaols, bumpers, farmer-generals, tocsins, and the Court of King’s Bench? Where are Shooter’s Hill, Temple Bar, and La Force, and who on earth was Mrs. Southcott? And did all those starving French people have baguettes in mind when they wanted bread?

The Reader’s Companion is not a literary analysis of Dickens’s novel, but a source of information, for both the new reader and the longterm fan, about things, people, places, and events mentioned in the text, to enhance the experience of reading a classic historical novel published 150 years ago, and which takes place well over two centuries ago. In 780 notes to the unabridged novel, historical author Susanne Alleyn explains Dickens’s references to things and places familiar to 19th-century Londoners, illustrates his many literary allusions and Victorian expressions, and provides an in-depth, factual background to his gripping but often misleading depiction of the French Revolution—a period that owes much of its distorted image today to the popularity of A TALE OF TWO CITIES itself.

“I was probably in college the last time I read A TALE OF TWO CITIES, and I enjoyed it very much. This time, reading Alleyn’s wonderful annotated edition full of helpful comments and clarifications, I found the experience doubly enjoyable.” (Brian Strayer, Ph.D., Department of History, Andrews University)

Don’t be fooled by cheap “annotated” editions of A TALE OF TWO CITIES available for e-readers! “Look Inside” and you’ll see that they are merely the text of the novel with a brief biography of Charles Dickens cribbed from Wikipedia, and maybe a few paragraphs of someone’s commentary on the novel, with no actual notes. This book is the real thing—a heavily annotated guide suitable for use in the English or history classroom, plus a chronology of the French Revolution, a filmography (and film reviews) of TALE, and an extensive bibliography for further reading in both history and literature. FYI: The eBook edition includes, as a bonus, the complete, annotated text of the play THE DEAD HEART by Watts Phillips, an 1859 historical melodrama that provided Dickens with some elements of the plot of A TALE OF TWO CITIES.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940045830843
Publisher: Spyderwort Press
Publication date: 04/14/2014
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Susanne Alleyn has loved history all her life, aided and abetted by her grandmother, Lillie V. Albrecht, an author of historical children's books in the 1950s and 60s. Happy to describe herself as an insufferable knowitall about historical trivia (although she lost on Jeopardy!), Susanne has been writing and researching historical fiction for nearly three decades. She is the author of A Far Better Rest, the reimagining of A Tale of Two Cities (Soho Press, 2000); the four Aristide Ravel Mysteries (St. Martin's Press); and The Executioner's Heir: A Novel of Eighteenth-Century France.

Nonfiction includes Medieval Underpants and Other Blunders: A Writer's (& Editor's) Guide to Keeping Historical Fiction Free of Common Anachronisms, Errors, & Myths (2012); A Tale of Two Cities: A Reader's Companion (2014); and The Weirder Side of Paris (2017).

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