Record Details
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The baker's tale : Ruby Spriggs and the legacy of Charles Dickens : a novel

Hauser, Thomas. (Author). Langton, James. (Added Author). Brilliance Audio (Firm) (Added Author). Recorded Books, LLC. (Added Author).

An impoverished nineteenth-century woman's coming of age and struggles against injustice are placed against a backdrop of the growing influence of Charles Dickens and shaped by an enamored young man, a scheming coal baron, a friendly dwarf, and an unconventional philanthropist.

CD Audiobook  - 2015
FIC Hause
1 copy / 0 on hold

Available Copies by Location

Location
Victoria Available
  • ISBN: 9781511308144
  • Physical Description 5 audio discs (6 hr., 11 min.) : digital ; 4 3/4 in.
  • Edition Unabridged.
  • Publisher Grand Haven, Mich. : Brilliance Audio ; [2015]

Content descriptions

General Note:
Title from container.
Compact disc.
In container (17 cm.).
GMD: compact disc.
Participant or Performer Note:
Performed by James Langton.

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 9781511308144
The Baker's Tale : Ruby Spriggs and the Legacy of Charles Dickens
The Baker's Tale : Ruby Spriggs and the Legacy of Charles Dickens
by Hauser, Thomas; Langton, James (Read by)
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Kirkus Review

The Baker's Tale : Ruby Spriggs and the Legacy of Charles Dickens

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Extrapolating from a Charles Dickens quote and "comingling" his own words with those of Dickens again, Hauser (The Final Recollections of Charles Dickens, 2014, etc.) delivers a preachy vision of Victorian England where idyllic romance and rapacious capitalism collide. Hauser's latest pastiche shares an era with Charles Dickens, as well as a linguistic style, some sentimentality, and a swathe of social concerns. But Hauser's politics are more bluntly stated"Crafty avarice grows rich. Honest labour remains poor"and neither his storytelling nor his characters offer the inventive magic of the original. Hauser's heroine is lovely, blameless, orphaned Ruby Spriggs, who is snatched from poverty to grow up in the motherly care of a baker and then, with the aid of kindly benefactor Octavius Joy, becomes a teacher. It's also through Joy that Ruby meets saintly, handsome pillar of integrity Edwin Chatfield, who's employed by dastardly coal manufacturer Alexander Murd. Murd's scheming, snobby daughter Isabella's infatuation with Edwin leads to the crushing of an innocent heart as Murd bullies Ruby into leaving the country without explaining her actions to anyone, supposedly for the sake of Edwin's good name and future prospects. As heartbroken Ruby sails to Boston and settles there, Edwin, mystified by her disappearance, visits one of Murd's coal mines in Lancashire, an opportunity for some moral tub-thumping on the truly appalling working conditions of the miners, later underlined by a pit accident that kills 120 workers. Ruby's eventual letter of explanation is the key to the story's swift resolution, which features a shipwreck and miraculous rescue, retribution for the wicked, salvation for the good, and a homily on love and marriage. A smudgy parable of industrialization wrapped in a sappy love story, Hauser's new novel once again piggybacks off the achievements of a genius. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Syndetic Solutions - Publishers Weekly Review for ISBN Number 9781511308144
The Baker's Tale : Ruby Spriggs and the Legacy of Charles Dickens
The Baker's Tale : Ruby Spriggs and the Legacy of Charles Dickens
by Hauser, Thomas; Langton, James (Read by)
Rate this title:
vote data
Click an element below to view details:

Publishers Weekly Review

The Baker's Tale : Ruby Spriggs and the Legacy of Charles Dickens

Publishers Weekly


(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

For his latest, Hauser (The Final Recollections of Charles Dickens) expands a Dickensian anecdote into the sweet, simple tale of Ruby Spriggs, an orphan who finds refuge and then love in mid-19th-century London. Though Dickens himself only appears in the copy of Oliver Twist that Ruby reads with her beloved, Edwin Chatfield, his influence is felt in this novel's lofty, moralizing championship of the poor and downtrodden, and the unsparing description of the now-infamous working conditions in the English coal mines. While the caricatured villainy of Edwin's employer Alexander Murd, who sends Ruby alone and broken-hearted to America, is as unlikely as the coincidence that eventually reunites the grieving lovers, the story endears through the generosity of the several benefactors who aid and support the central pair. These include the euphoniously named Octavius Joy, the American bookseller Abraham Hart, and the humble baker Antonio, who tells their story. Hauser's spare prose, unadorned but for the scattered details that anchor the reader in a bygone age, delivers a tale true to its source of inspiration in the generous way it insists the good and pure-hearted will triumph over the wicked. (Dec.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.