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Girl in a Blue Dress: A Novel Inspired by the Life and Marriage of Charles Dickens
 
 
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Girl in a Blue Dress: A Novel Inspired by the Life and Marriage of Charles Dickens [Hardcover]

Gaynor Arnold
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 414 pages
  • Publisher: Crown Publishing Group (NY) (14 July 2009)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0307462269
  • ISBN-13: 978-0307462268
  • Product Dimensions: 16.3 x 3.8 x 27.7 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 2,650,819 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Gaynor Arnold
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Product Description

Product Description

At the end of her life, Catherine, the cast-off wife of Charles Dickens, gave the letters she had received from her husband to their daughter Kate, asking her to donate them to the British Museum, “so the world may know that he loved me once.” The incredible vulnerability and heartache evident beneath the surface of this remark inspired Gaynor Arnold to write Girl in a Blue Dress, a dazzling debut novel inspired by the life of this tragic yet devoted woman. Arnold brings the spirit of Catherine Dickens to life in the form of Dorothea “Dodo” Gibson–a woman who is doomed to live in the shadow of her husband, Alfred, the most celebrated author in the Victorian world.

The story opens on the day of Alfred’s funeral. Dorothea is not among the throngs in attendance when The One and Only is laid to rest. Her mourning must take place within the walls of her modest apartment, a parting gift from Alfred as he ushered her out of their shared home and his life more than a decade earlier. Even her own children, save her outspoken daughter Kitty, are not there to offer her comfort–they were poisoned against her when Alfred publicly declared her an unfit wife and mother. Though she refuses to don the proper mourning attire, Dodo cannot bring herself to demonize her late husband, something that comes all too easily to Kitty.

Instead, she reflects on their time together–their clandestine and passionate courtship, when he was a force of nature and she a willing follower; and the salad days of their marriage, before too many children sapped her vitality and his interest. She uncovers the frighteningly hypnotic power of the celebrity author she married. Now liberated from his hold on her, Dodo finds the courage to face her adult children, the sister who betrayed her, and the charming actress who claimed her husband’s love and left her heart aching.

A sweeping tale of love and loss that was long-listed for both the Man Booker Prize and the Orange Prize, Girl in a Blue Dress is both an intimate peek at the woman who was behind one of literature’s most esteemed men and a fascinating rumination on marriage that will resonate across centuries.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
Encore! 27 May 2012
By MisterHobgoblin TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover
Historical fictional biography isn't everyone's cup of tea. Those who don't like it will not enjoy Girl in a Blue Dress, which is a slightly disguised fictional biography of Catherine Dickens, wife of Charles Dickens.

Gaynor Arnold takes up where, so to speak, Charles Dickens left off. Alfred Gibson (Dickens) has just been buried and his wife Dorothea (Catherine Dickens) is briefed on the funeral by her daughter Kitty. It soon becomes clear that Dorothea did not live with her husband, and that there was scandal and wrongdoing in the Gibson household.

In a pageant of Victoriana - with servants and morals and etiquette and horses - Dorothea reflects on her ill-starred marriage to Gibson, moving from courtship and early love, through the rigours of childbirth, through to her long and lonely estrangement. And the story of Gibson, as seen through others' eyes, is of a man who is revered, both by himself and by others. He can do no wrong; he can treat women with high-handed arrogance, cruelty even, and the women will look within themselves for the fault.

Dorothea, in particular, cannot bear to see Gibson's cruelty for what it is. She looks for evidence that Gibson once loved her, as though this would matter. Dorothea refuses to hear criticism from Kitty, and even appears in the final pages to rationalize Gibson's relationship with his mistress - for whom Dorothea had been passed over. And the children, too, look to blame anyone other than Gibson for the breakdown of their household. They simply won't acknowledge the central role played by Gibson in controlling lives and manipulating information. The one exception, perhaps, was Kitty who did venture some negative opinion - but was perhaps easily dismissed as having her own axe to grind.

Gibson was a wonderfully well drawn character - his natural arrogance spurred on by public acclaim. His passion for work and fear of debt are well known, but manifest themselves in this novel in the form of absolute control freakery - but delivered with a false smile. He is a master of self-justification, and every slight and misdemeanour comes with a carefully thought through rationalization. Quite simply, Gibson didn't permit himself to make mistakes. Having said that, even Gibson could not halt the ravages of time, and appeared to trade in his female companionship for slightly newer models. This seemed to be the one area where Gibson admits to making a mistake - that of marrying Dorothea - even though the irony of the situation is that his one admission of a mistake is not really a mistake to be admitted. Rather, it is just a flimsy excuse for his shabbiness.

The beauty of the novel is in some of the detail - and an audience with Queen Victoria herself is a clear highlight. The frustration of the Queen, caught between trying to engage in real conversation and pompously maintaining her rank. And the visit from Eddie, a foppish - even camp - son is pure vaudeville. Then the hapless Augustus and his money worries...

Girl in a Blue Dress is a simple novel, very well told, and with a surprising hidden complexity in the relationships, emotions and motives at play - all hinging on the greatness of the self proclaimed One and Only (Gibson/Dickens, not Chesney Hawkes) - and people's desire for greatness by association, whatever the cost. For myself - a fan of both Dickens and historical biography - it was spellbinding, compelling and impossible to set down. The pages flew by in a voracious hunger for more gossip and salacious details.

Encore!
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  17 reviews
30 of 31 people found the following review helpful
Dickens lovers will enjoy the fictional life of Charles and Catherine Dickens in "Girl in a Blue Dress" 14 Aug 2009
By C. M Mills - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
He was the greatest Victorian author in all of British literature. Charles Dickens was a brilliant author of such masterpieces as David Copperfield; Hard Times; Bleak House; A Tale of Two Cities; Our Mutual Friend, Martin Chuzzlewit; Oliver Twist and many others. Yet little is known about his longsuffering wife Catherine Dickens.
In this new first time novel British author Gaynor Arnold recreates the domestic life of Dickens and Catherine. She calls the author "Alfred Gibbons" and his wife Dorothea. Dody is a buxom beauty who is wed to the young energetic Gibbons. He rises to fame with his genius while she stays home giving birth to many children. The famous and spoiled author has an affair with an actress, leaves his wife taking his children with him and condemning her to ten years of living alone is a small London flat.
The novel begins on the day of the author's funeral. We hear Dodo tell her story as she remembers the high and low points of her life with the fascinating but unfaithful author. Arnold has done her homework allowing the reader inside the home of a celebrity and his family. Dickens was childish and selfish but loved his wife. He was easily infatuated by a pretty face and fell into a long romance with a young actress name Wilhemine. She and Dodo confront each other following his funeral. This is the most dramatic scene in the novel.
Arnold has done a good job in her first venture into novel writing. The book was longlisted for the Booker Prize. Arnold's research is commendable and her discussion of adultery is tasteful rather than prurient. Her book will win legions of admirers in book clubs across the English speaking world.
As a longtime Dickensian I was already familiar with much of what Arnold tells us. Someone who is coming new to this material will probably enjoy the book more than I did. It was interesting and kept me turning the pages, though, and that is the goal of a good historical novel.
A good first start by a new author whose best work may lie ahead of her.
23 of 25 people found the following review helpful
(3.5) "How easily she was won over, how easily we all were." 14 July 2009
By Luan Gaines - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Arnold's depiction of a Victorian marriage is painfully accurate, a fictional biography of a prolific English writer, Alfred Gibson and his wife, Dorothea, a thinly-veiled account of the marriage of Charles Dickens and his wife, Catherine. Names and events have been changed, of course, but it is certainly reasonable to extrapolate a sense of the marriage and how difficult a life with such a man could be. From the bright days of early marriage to a struggling writer who will capture the imaginations of countless fans, "Dodo" exemplifies the Victorian wife, subservient, gracious and self-sacrificing. But as Alfred's creative genius expands, his self-importance multiplies in equal measure. At the same time, whatever the complex psychological constructs of this man, it becomes his mission to denigrate and belittle his wife, as though to grow his own stature it is necessary to diminish hers: hence the years of humiliation, criticism and finally rejection.

Arnold's challenge is to cast Alfred in the true colors of his nature, while imbuing Dodo's character with compassion, humility and the debilitating burden of petty jealousy justified by her husband's outrageous appetites. For all her suffering, the lonely years of childbearing and Alfred's barbed attacks, her figure lost to the rigors of too many births and an excess of laudanum, Dodo fulfills her wifely duty at the cost of her soul. Rationalizing Alfred's behavior, justifying his misdeeds, Dodo temporizes, apologizes, crumbles under the weight of her husband's demands. Instead of a spirited, brave lady married to a demanding, domineering man, Dodo becomes his victim. As the tale moves between Alfred's death and the reminiscences of confrontation, humiliation and emotional abuse, this rogue's gallery of demeaning incidents is painful to explore, competition with her sisters for the affection of her husband, the ultimate betrayal of a mistress replacing her in the family home, Dodo's removal to a smaller dwelling.

Given the author's familiarity with Dickens and his family history, had this been offered as a biography, it might have been more palatable to this reader. But Dodo's long-suffering cooperation in chapter after chapter peels away any compassion I might have, replaced by frustration and disappointment. This is the story of a victim, unlike her Victorian counterparts in that Dorothea is married to a man beloved by the people; he shall always be a hero, she a tragic failure. But without spirit- or hope- Dodo fails on a more significant scale that that of society's expectations. Battered and denied, in a laudanum-induced fugue when her children need her, Dorothea wears her crown of thorns proudly, parading her scars like badges of honor. It is literally painful to endure the weight of this marital story, the stripping of one to appease the massive needs of the other. Dodo makes me weary, her weakness my burden. And there is no relief with Alfred's death, Dodo clinging to the fragments of a severely dysfunctional relationship. Luan Gaines/2009.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
A Fascinating Character Study 14 Sep 2009
By Bookreporter - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
PBS's popular "Masterpiece Theatre" program recently produced a multi-part televised adaptation of Charles Dickens's LITTLE DORRIT, considered by many to be one of the author's most accomplished works. During the introduction to one of the episodes, the host commented that despite Dickens's lifelong marriage, by the time of the writing of this novel he had fallen out of love with his extremely fertile (and, as a result, rather stout) wife, preferring instead the affections of a childlike, domestic, sweet and mild-mannered girl --- someone very much like the character of Amy Dorrit herself. In LITTLE DORRIT, the hero, Arthur Clennam, is horrified to discover that, during his years abroad, his childhood sweetheart has ballooned into a vast but vacuous woman, a figure to be both pitied and mocked --- and contrasted with the earnest sweetness and childlike beauty of Amy Dorrit. What must Dickens's wife have felt to see her own sad marriage reduced to fictional farce?

In GIRL IN A BLUE DRESS, author Gaynor Arnold seeks to explore this question and others, as she writes her book from the point of view of a woman inspired by Charles Dickens's wife, Catherine. The Dickensian character is named Alfred Gibson; his wife is Dorothea. However, it would soon become clear to those with even a passing knowledge of Dickens's career that Gibson is a stand-in for the most famous Victorian novelist. Catherine Dickens has been reduced to supporting character status in most books about her famous husband; here she is given a chance to tell her own story.

GIRL IN A BLUE DRESS opens the day of Gibson's funeral; Dorothea, who has been cast out from the family (including being estranged from most of her six surviving children), chooses to remain in the shadows rather than face the twin horrors of the crowd's adulation of her husband and her own very public shame. Dorothea is visited by her eldest daughter, Kitty, who, although she was her father's favorite, has still remained loyal to her mother. As Kitty recounts the mania that has overtaken London in the wake of her father's death, Dorothea casts her mind back to the very earliest days of her courtship by "The One and Only," as Gibson becomes known. Gibson is alternately egotistical and endearingly eccentric, dramatic and dour, as he entreats Dorothea to be more fun-loving but reminds her that they both must work very hard to avoid the poverty and misery that characterized so much of his own youth.

With marriage came conjugal bliss and babies; faced with Dorothea's more matronly figure and maternal responsibilities, Gibson's attention often strays elsewhere. The master storyteller, however, is also quite skilled at fabricating justifications for his own interest in, and behavior toward, young women --- including Dorothea's own younger sisters. As Dorothea retells the sad saga of her marriage to Gibson, she illustrates the combination of pride and disappointment that characterize marriage to one so talented, so famous and so single-minded --- a man whose greatest devotion was not to his wife, but to the characters he created.

In the days and weeks following Gibson's death, even as she considers all this history, Dorothea has a choice to make. Will she continue to be a virtual prisoner in her own home, bound by shame and isolated from the friends and family who used to love her? Or will she use her famous husband's demise as an opportunity to rejoin the outside world?

Those with only a passing knowledge of the life and work of Charles Dickens will still find much to enjoy in this fascinating character study of a Victorian woman in what seems to be an impossible situation. Dickensophiles, however, will be delighted not only by the opportunity to read a fictionalized autobiography of one of the key figures in Dickens's own life, but also by the seamless way in which Arnold skillfully incorporates Dickens's characters into his life story. GIRL IN A BLUE DRESS will show readers a new side of Dickens --- one that portrays the great author as more flawed, perhaps, but also more human --- and a portrait of the great man's wife as a fully realized character, a product of her times and circumstances, not just as a literary device or farce.

--- Reviewed by Norah Piehl
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