Look inside

A Tale of Two Cities

3.6(88)
Language
English
Not availableFree shipping
Buy Now

About the book

First published in 1859, during Dickens' mature period of writing, A Tale of Two Cities remains one of the greatest novels on the French Revolution. The two cities are Paris and London and the scene shifts from one to the other in a story of brutality, repression, hatred and revenge on the one hand and idealism, love and self-sacrifice on the other. The Marquis de St Evremonde, along with his brother, cruelly molests a peasant girl and mortally wounds her brother. Dr Manette is called to treat them, but is then confined in the Bastille for eighteen years to suppress his evidence. The fall of the dreaded prison secures his release, but he is ill and driven to madness. He is brought to England to convalesce and slowly regains his sanity. Darnay, a nephew of the Marquis who has renounced his family for their cruel practices, is now in England and falls in love with and marries Lucie, the doctor's daughter.He makes a trip to Paris to rescue an old family retainer, but is recognized, arrested and sentenced to death. He is only saved by an act of reckless self-sacrifice by Sydney Carton, an English barrister come to no good, who loves Lucie and substitutes himself in the place of Darnay

Editions (30)

ISBN9788171674077
PublisherRupa Publications
Publication Date10/01/99
Pages416

Reviews & Ratings

88 ratings

9 reviews

3.6

Tap to filter

  • lulia197
    lulia197

    86 Followers

    4.0

    Definitiv ein Klassiker! Ohne die Wikipedia-Inhaltsangabe hätte ich den Inhalt aber auch einfach nicht gerafft 😅 Ich musste nach jedem Kapitel nachlesen, ob ich das denn alles auch richtig verstanden habe. Inhaltlich genau mein Geschmack: Intrigen, menschliche Verwirrungen und Verirrungen, Tragik und ein dramatisches Ende. Ich bereue es auf keinen Fall!

    Feb 5, 2026

  • resisdreams
    resisdreams

    79 Followers

    5.0

    Für mich die düsterste Geschichte, die ich von Charles Dickens gelesen habe.

    Bis zur Hälfte des Buches war ich verwirrt. Es kamen viele Personen vor, und der Wechsel der Orte war für mich nicht immer ersichtlich. Doch dann ergab alles Sinn. Der Schluss war für mich ausschlaggebend für die Bewertung. Insgesamt finde ich, dass es ihm auch gut gelungen ist, die Stimmung der Zeit einzufangen.

    Für mich die düsterste Geschichte, die ich von Charles Dickens gelesen habe.

    Oct 30, 2025

  • sarinareads
    sarinareads

    6 Followers

    4.5

    This impressed me above all through its language. The plot itself is not particularly fast-paced; events do not unfold one after another in rapid succession, and even the most dramatic turning points are rarely presented as abrupt ruptures. Instead, it becomes a genuine page-turner because of the voice of its narrator. Through poetic and philosophically existential reflections, Dickens creates an overwhelmingly tense and unsettling atmosphere that sustains the suspense. These passages never feel excessive or pretentious; they are simply beautifully written. I also deeply admire how Dickens handles the central motif of fate. It is embodied in Madame Defarge’s knitting, through which she records the revolution and the people involved in it. Her knitting is at once a diegetic element and a metaphorical thread of fate, blurring the boundaries between narrative reality and symbolism because she obviously records individual people’s fate in her knitting. Equally impressive is Dickens’ treatment of duality. As the title itself promises, the novel constantly reflects on oppositions without ever reducing them to simplistic binaries. This is perhaps best exemplified by Charles Darnay and Sydney Carton. They are counterparts and two sides of the same coin, yet not in terms of good and evil. Carton is shaped by disappointment, melancholy, and a sense of wasted potential, whereas Darnay’s life appears marked by fortune and fulfilment. A lesser novel might have turned Carton into a resentful rival seeking redemption only after committing wrongs. Instead, both men remain fundamentally good people. Their contrasting life paths reinforce the novel’s exploration of fate, inheritance, self-reinvention, and metaphorical rebirth. Dickens weaves all of these themes and more together with remarkable subtlety and depth. A stunning novel!

    Jun 16, 2026

3 of 9 reviews

Reading is better with the READO app.

Discover books, track progress, read together.

Library

Keep track