Thursday, December 10, 2020

Review: Vanity Fair

Vanity Fair Vanity Fair by William Makepeace Thackeray
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I paired this read with Earl Grey Tea and biscotti(!) And I stuck to the decaf version of this tea because this was a very looooong book but 100% worthy of the time invested. I grew to know and love (or know and hate) both the major and minor characters. Thackeray takes time building the action - not all authors can hold onto their reading audience without dropping big events onto every other page. He does this with art and ease; he painstakingly builds your knowledge of the place itself - Vanity Fair - and all of the fools who dally there.

The title of the book (first published as a series of papers) comes from Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress in which Bunyan described a town called Vanity where there was an ongoing party and where men and women went to sin and celebrate their worldly things. Thackeray sure does the name justice here. Chapter upon chapter, he draws back the curtain on 19th century British society.

It is a work of art. If you like writing from this era and enjoy epic books that honor the King's English from start to finish, then this is a book for you! Without giving anything away, I say, long live Captain William Dobbin ~

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