Category Archives: Tale of Two Cities

“What the Dickens” is “A Tale of Two Cities” All About? Hear the In’s and Out’s Here!



Here is my “take” on one of the most famous novels of all time, “A Tale of Two Cities,” by Charles Dickens. Why is it so great? What the dickens was Dickens up to when he wrote it? And what should be our takeaway today. Tune in here, and listen, learn and, most importantly, enjoy!

I have narrated the ENTIRE novel, for Librivox. Listen to the whole thing here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CS3QBeYzt6E&t=7932s


“Darkness,” from A Tale of Two Cities (Book Three, Chapter 12)



Carton reconnoiters the Defarge’s wine shop in this episode, and learns of Madame Defarge’s dark plans for the Evremonde family. Dr. Manette, out of the trauma of his son-in-law’s imminent execution (and its connection to his own testimony), returns to his shoemaking once again. Carton instructs Jarvis Lorry on what he should do the next day to save the Evremondes.


Book Three, Chapter Thirteen: “Fifty-Two,” from “A Tale of Two Cities”



This is where the plot finally comes together. Carton visits Darnay to change places in LaForce, with the aid of chloroform. Barsad takes Darnay to Lucy and all but Jerry and Miss Pross board the carriage and leave to flee Paris for England. Dickens is herein a master of suspense, which builds to a crescendo near the end of the chapter. Next Chapter: “The Knitting Done.”


Book the Third, Chapter 14 of A Tale of Two Cities: “The Knitting Done”



Madame Defarge discovers that her prey, Lucy, Little Lucy and Dr. Manette, have fled her clutches and are on the country roads of France, fleeing for England, What she does not know is that her most important enemy, Charles Darnay, is with them, having exchanged places in Laforce prison with Sidney Carton. Standing between Madame DeFarge and death for the fleeing prey is Miss Pross. Who will win the battle to the death? Listen to find out.


The Period



The Breakaway Cafe is the name for a place to chill in this course. In this time of Covid sometimes we all need to take a break. Breakaway Cafe is such a place. Historians are people who tell (true) stories. But in Breakaway Cafe, I tell short stories that are often fiction, narrated by yours truly just because yours truly wants to tell them.

You DO NOT have to pay any attention to Breakaway Cafe posts, because they have nothing to do with the course and none of them “are on the exam.” Also, you don’t have to chill, and that’s what Breakaway Cafe is all about. Humans love stories, though, and I would just like to contribute to that because audio narration, as well as telling stories that are fiction is a hobby of mine, in another life of mine.


In this first episode I narrate the first chapter of Charles Dickens’s “A Tale of Two Cities,” a chapter called “The Period.” This novel about people caught up in the maelstrom of the French Revolution was not published as a complete novel originally but was serialized like a magazine, with chapters coming out, one at a time over many months. They were like episodes in a mini-series that could not be binged. So in listening to this episode, you are listening to the novel as Dickens originally intended and as its first readers received it.


Dickens was also an actor, and his first love was theater. So, when there is dialogue (not in the first chapter), I am going to be playing the parts as he intended, with many different voices. Eventually I will add more chapters (as I record them, because I am just beginning to do so, for a public domain web site called Librivox.org). By the way, this is a non-commercial site for which nobody makes any money. It is a site just to make the world a better place, gratis.

I am no Simon Callow, the dean of writers and narrators of the works of Dickens. But, then again I don’t charge for my performances. They are just designed to provide moments of respite and chill in this Breakaway Cafe.