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Our Mutual Friend Readalong

361 replies

Piggywaspushed · 04/08/2020 16:07

As discussed on the previous Davis Copperfield Readalong, I hope some of us are eager to start Our Mutual Friend!

This is quite a complex one to break up. As usual, Dickens published in 19 monthly instalments but this one has 4 'Books' .

It is split up as follows:

BOOK THE FIRST: THE CUP AND THE LIP
I – May 1864 (chapters 1–4);
II – June 1864 (chapters 5–7);
III – July 1864 (chapters 8–10);
IV – August 1864 (chapters 11–13);
V – September 1864 (chapters 14–17).
BOOK THE SECOND: BIRDS OF A FEATHER
VI – October 1864 (chapters 1–3);
VII – November 1864 (chapters 4–6);
VIII – December 1864 (chapters 7–10);
IX – January 1865 (chapters 11–13);
X – February 1865 (chapters 14–16).
BOOK THE THIRD: A LONG LANE
XI – March 1865 (chapters 1–4);
XII – April 1865 (chapters 5–7);
XIII – May 1865 (chapters 8–10);
XIV – June 1865 (chapters 11–14);
XV – July 1865 (chapters 15–17).
BOOK THE FOURTH: A TURNING
XVI – August 1865 (chapters 1–4);
XVII – September 1865 (chapters 5–7);
XVIII – October 1865 (chapters 8–11);
XIX-XX – November 1865 [chapters 12–17 (Chapter the Last)].

4 instalments is feasible but might be too much for those of us working/ reading other books/child or DP wrangling/ insert other reason.

Therefore, I would suggest 8 instalments, splitting each book in two somehow?

That would take us to March 2021 and then we can pretend 2020 never existed.

Up for it? Thoughts?

Looking forward to it! All usual suspects and newcomers welcome.

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InMyOwnParticularIdiom · 24/08/2020 12:43

I'm up to chapter 6, found the first two chapters really hard going but settling into it a bit more now (still hard work). Sometimes there's a sentence I just have to give up on because I can't get any sense out of it however many times I read it. But the chapter where Silas Wegg meets the Boffins made me chuckle.

nowanearlyNicemum · 27/08/2020 17:54

Ordered my copy on Tuesday, fat chance it will get here before the end of the month. I'll be playing catch-up from the word go!!

Piggywaspushed · 27/08/2020 19:14

I am sure you will catch up!

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FortunaMajor · 29/08/2020 07:44

Nicemum can you get hold of a free digital copy for now from either Project Gutenberg or Librivox audio maybe? Could let you get started at least until your copy arrives.

Indigosalt · 29/08/2020 08:31

Just finished chapter 9 and it's all starting to make sense. I too was struggling to keep up with all the characters and plot lines around chapters 5 and 6, so would say it's worth persevering.

nowanearlyNicemum · 29/08/2020 11:25

I didn't think of that Fortuna, good idea.

Piggywaspushed · 29/08/2020 12:57

Yes, I agree about Chapter 9 .

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Okki · 29/08/2020 18:17

I found this thread last weekend and think it's a lovely idea. I ordered a copy earlier in the week. It has now arrived so shall make a start this weekend and attempt to catch up over the next couple of weeks. We can be latecomers together @nowanearlyNicemum I'm really looking forward to this. I'd not even heard of the book before. I think the only Dickens I've ever finished is Bleak House.

Piggywaspushed · 29/08/2020 18:26

Welcome welcome!

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InMyOwnParticularIdiom · 29/08/2020 23:18

I've read the 10 chapters! I'm rewarding myself with a Sophie Hannah for light relief! Grin

SatsukiKusakabe · 30/08/2020 09:54

Welcome newcomers Smile I’m over halfway now and going to have another stint later, but I feel quite into it. I really enjoyed the dinner party chapter, so funny. It does take in a lot of characters in the first chapters but I’m sure it will focus in time.

HarlanWillYouStopNamingNuts · 31/08/2020 14:11

I've read the first ten chapters. I was going great guns to the end of chapter 9, then realised 10 was another Twemlow chapter, which I really dislike as I find the prose hard to follow and the characters really unsympathetic. I think I'll have to just blast through future Twemlow episodes or else I'll get bogged down.

Having said that, the rest is great fun. Love Silas Wegg, though not sure Dickens would get away with so many wooden leg jokes these days. Also loved the visit of the poor, good-hearted Boffins to the clergyman in search of a spare orphan.

The solicitor and the barrister are funny, too - I'm in the same business and in some ways nothing much has changed!

Indigosalt · 31/08/2020 17:00

Harlan yes, my heart sank a bit when I released we were back with the Veneerings for Chapter 10. I guess their function in the scheme of the book will eventually become clear.

Indigosalt · 01/09/2020 12:44

Sorry, that should have said realised not released. Although I did also feel quite "released" when I finished this chapter Grin.

ChessieFL · 01/09/2020 13:04

Like someone else said upthread all we seem to have at the moment is a collection of different people and events and we’re waiting to see how they all link up. So far I’m just confused so hopefully all will become clear soon!

Piggywaspushed · 01/09/2020 13:12

Sorry! Am late to my own readalong! Because bloody thread keeps disappearing.

I did note title in Chapter 9 and like the concealed identity plot. I also have a favourite quotation which I will post later.

Sunning myself today before tomorrow's onslaught.

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Piggywaspushed · 01/09/2020 13:13

And we have set up a revenge plot against the odious Veneerings so I look forward to that!

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EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 01/09/2020 15:17

I found it all quite torturous

Still on board, though viewing it as more of a project/tick a box job now than an enjoyable read

HarlanWillYouStopNamingNuts · 01/09/2020 15:25

I'm torn between enjoying OMF in small doses and thinking that I need to get properly into it so that I get into the flow.

Okay, now we have established that the table is in fact a person, what or who is the Analytical Chemist? I have a feeling he is some kind of butler, is that right?

Piggywaspushed · 01/09/2020 15:25

I believe so!

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EineReiseDurchDieZeit · 01/09/2020 15:40

The table isnt a person, Twemlow is a man The Veneerings barely know who they frequently invite for dinners. The table stuff is that the more guests they are the more they have to extend the table and Twemlow is pushed further from the hosts.

He is constantly perplexed that none of the guests seem to know the hosts and no one knows how they came to know them.

Terpsichore · 01/09/2020 15:42

I was just laughing at your comment on the 50 Bookers' new thread Piggy Grin

I'm really enjoying it so far and the plot is coming back to me after the many years since I last read it - I'd been afraid that I wouldn't find it as good as I remembered but thankfully that's not the case.

I'm reading a fairly old Penguin edition which has useful notes, and one that particularly struck me was that very little Dickens wrote by this late stage in his career was unconnected to current events (after all, he'd been a crusading magazine editor for years, taking up all sorts of causes). That really brings an extra dimension to the book for me - it's a highly contemporary novel.

InMyOwnParticularIdiom · 01/09/2020 17:01

After the torture of the first two chapters, I found I really got into it and could have read on after the end of chapter 10. It's much funnier than I was expecting and most scenes involving Mr Boffin make me chuckle. My favourite moment so far was when Silas Wegg didn't know the difference between the Russian and Roman empires so made out it was something not to be mentioned in front of Mrs Boffin... I also liked the bit where the Boffins visited the vicar to enquire after an orphan, and the vicar was sure he must have one somewhere 'in stock', as it were.

I haven't read Dickens since a teenager, and a slightly off-the-wall thought that struck me was the influence on later writers like Terry Pratchett. I.e. Ankh-Morpork is a fantastical version of Victorian London teaming with comic characters with intertwining plot strands which connect to each other in ways that are not clear at first.

I think my approach to keeping the storyline in mind and not forgetting who everyone is each month will be to read 20-30 pages a week, rather than save it all up for the end of the month (famous last words).

Piggywaspushed · 01/09/2020 17:09

I liked the orphan bit. Must find that quotation because it was from there.

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Piggywaspushed · 01/09/2020 18:26

Oh, I think this is the bit that tickled me :

Mr and Mrs Boffin, sitting side by side, with Fashion drawn to an immeasurable distance

Bless the Boffins for their hopeless lack of fashion.

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