Book Review: Oliver Twist

Writing is something very personal. From the author’s soul. Finally, writing is a form of self-expression. It is foolish to write about things one does not know. In most games, the author’s opinion is expressed throughout. The first example is Charles Dickens, Oliver Twist.

Dickens was someone who was angry with English society in the 1800s. He certainly despised everything about English culture. During that time the children were orphaned, abused and treated like second class citizens. Oliver Twist was an orphan who was treated horribly by the inhuman Mr. Bumble. Mr. Bumble told a vicious lie about Oliver. He did not care what happened to Oliver. Nobody cared if Oliver lived or died until he met Mr. Brownlow. Most pupils in England were not as fortunate as Oliver in the 19th century. There were very few who believed that the child had returned as an adult. This offended Dickens’s writer.

The author of the book spends a lot of time presenting characters who are opposed to each other to prove the point. This happened in Oliver Twist, a classic story about an orphan, written by Charles Dickens. Mr. Brownlow and Mr. Bumble are polar opposites. None of them share the same qualities or values. One sign is a good guy and the other is a bad guy.

Heroic, kind, generous characters have always been represented in writing, whether Greek mythology or contemporary. Mr. Browlow is pretty much the definition of a “good man.” Poor Oliver takes it, knowing nothing of himself. Oliver Twist was more secure than he had ever been when he lived with a kind gentleman. No one has ever been cruel to Mr. He could call Brownlow. The same cannot be said for many of the characters in the novel. Oliver could have suffered miserably in prison accused of pickpocketing but luckily he found his hero.

Whether it’s a movie or a great TV show, there have always been characters they love to hate. Mr. Bumble is one of them. Cruel and greedy. No concern but himself. It is about what he wants, and nothing else about materials. Not the sick children, not the wife. The reader cannot help but be deeply enraged by Mr. Bumble’s self-indulgent, ignorant, and indecent behavior. It is not a bomb that does not have some motive.

There are few books that stand the test of time. People change a lot and times from the past become useless. Oliver Twist, written by Charles Dickens, is a rare exception. It must be embraced by all. An excellent representation of what life was like in London in the 1800s, it discusses issues that are still relevant today, and it’s a well-written, literary masterpiece from one of the world’s most famous authors.

Students don’t always understand what life was before by reading boring text. It helps when they can see it through someone else’s eyes. That’s the kind of power Oliver Twist has. The reader can imagine himself in their shoes.

Although it was made new in the year 1800, there are still a lot of problems with the book today. The number of children who have been viciously abused has gone down quite a bit, and is still there. The same can be said about the number of people living in poverty. There are millions of people who have no right or place to call home. Greed and power are still good things that people still have today. Money in America is almost the second religion. As society progresses, not much has changed. That is why it is so important that people confront their faults and the faults of others around them.

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