"If it had not borne Mr. Dickens's name, it would in all probability have hardly met with a single reader; and if it has any popularity at all, it must derive it from the circumstance that it stands in the same relation to his other books as salad dressing stands in towards a complete salad. It is a bottle of the sauce in which Pickwick and Nicholas Nickleby were dressed, and to which they owed much of their popularity; and though it has stood open on the sideboard for a very long time, and has lost a good deal of its original flavour, the philosophic inquirer who is willing to go through the penance of tasting it will be, to a certain extent, repaid. He will have an opportunity of studying in its elements a system of cookery which procured for its ingenious inventor unparalleled popularity, and enabled him to infect the literature of his country with a disease which manifests itself in such repulsive symptoms that it has gone far to invert the familiar doctrines of the Latin Grammar about ingenuous arts, and to substitute for them the conviction that the principal results of a persistent devotion to literature are an incurable vulgarity of mind and of taste, and intolerable arrogance of temper."
--from an original review of A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens. Don't worry, our heroes talk about it.
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Masque of the Red Death
Henry V
Henry IV, Parts 1 and 2
The Last Battle
The Magician's Nephew
The Horse and His Boy
Richard II
The Hollow Crown (Shakespeare)
Little Women
The Silver Chair
The Voyage of the Dawn Treader
Prince Caspian
The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe
The Chronicles of Narnia, Part 2
Chronicles of Narnia, Part 1
Revenge of the poetry
Witness for the Prosecution (1957 film)
Top ten summer reads
Do women like poetry? Also, what IS poetry?
Bonus ep: Poetry at Brandon's House
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The Round Table
The World We Made
Sanity at the Movies
The War of the Worlds
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
Then Comes What?
The Ville