El peque�o Oliver Twist es ingenuo, confiado y noble, por lo que f�cilmente cae bajo los enga�os de personas que le ganan en astucia. Esa confianza extrema tambi�n lo lleva a relacionarse con tipos malvados, como Fagin, el l�der de la banda de rateros. No la ha tenido f�cil en la vida. Despu�s de quedar hu�rfano, es enviado a un orfanato, donde pasa a�os de tristeza y angustias. Pero Oliver est� determinado a no darse por vencido por la adversidad.
Read More
El peque�o Oliver Twist es ingenuo, confiado y noble, por lo que f�cilmente cae bajo los enga�os de personas que le ganan en astucia. Esa confianza extrema tambi�n lo lleva a relacionarse con tipos malvados, como Fagin, el l�der de la banda de rateros. No la ha tenido f�cil en la vida. Despu�s de quedar hu�rfano, es enviado a un orfanato, donde pasa a�os de tristeza y angustias. Pero Oliver est� determinado a no darse por vencido por la adversidad.
Read Less
Add this copy of Oliver Twist to cart. $12.02, new condition, Sold by Ingram Customer Returns Center rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from NV, USA, published 2024 by Astria Ediciones.
Prompt, well packaged, as offered, thank you.
Prompt, well packaged, as offered, thank you.
Angelina
Aug 9, 2007
"Please sir, I want some more"
Oliver Twist, a rich tapestry of English society in the 1830?s, is one of Charles Dickens' s best-known and well-loved works. In the first chapters, Dickens satirizes the hypocrisy and flaws of Victorian social institutions (under the Poor Laws of 1834) including the treatment of the poor, the exploitation of the innocent, the corruption of society´s government, its laws and criminal system. Oliver Twist journeys from innocence to experience without capitulating to the evil forces that hinder his progress and, thus addresses the pervasive problem of evil in society and human nature. Dickens uses Oliver's physical torment to evoke the reader's sympathy and incite his or her awareness of society's corruption. In doing so, he unearths the problem of evil as an ever-present force that dwells not only within the supernatural underworld of Fagin and Sikes but, ironically, looms in the most unsuspecting places, even in the very institutions established to aid society's poor. In Dickens?s descriptions, the words ?neglect? and ?decay? recur insistently. He uses irony, sarcasm and biting language. Interestingly, he doesn't suggest any solutions; he merely points out the suffering inflicted by these systems and their deep injustice. Readers, who appreciate a good read, would undoubtedly agree with Oliver's famous plea, "Please sir, I want some more"