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This book is about the founder of Reuters...Paul Julius Reuter. The start of the book dates back to 1851 and the use of the infamous "pigeon postman." However, in reality "Reuters" is also a story of how eminent European Jewish thinkers realized that they earnestly needed to abandon their old exclusiveness and become full citizens of their adopted countries.
Julius Reuter arrives in London among the crowds of foreigners in 1851 and quickly realized that the financial markets desperately needed quicker news distribution. From these humble roots...an empire unfolded. However, it wasn't easy and this book documents the many problems with the power politics in Europe.
In conclusion, this book is about a family business. It includes an facisnating study of the expansion of the British Empire and the sturdy new world of journalism. I particularly enjoyed the narrative of World War II. However, I think its safe to warn that the many laurels of the "Reuter family tree" detracts from the serious objectivity of this book.
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I don't know what the previous reviewer's demands are when reading a novel, but mine are these: the story must create its world - whatever and wherever that world might be - and make me BELIEVE it. If the novelist cannot create that world in my mind, and convince me of its truths, they've wasted my time (style doesn't matter - it can be clean and spare like Orwell or verbose like Dickens, because any style can work in the hands of someone who knows how to use it). Many novels fail this test, but Bleak House is not one of them.
Bleak House succeeds in creating a wonderfully dark and complex spider web of a world. On the surface it's unfamiliar: Victorian London and the court of Chancery - obviously no one alive today knows that world first hand. And yet as you read it you know it to be real: the deviousness, the longing, the secrets, the bureaucracy, the overblown egos, the unfairness of it all. Wait a minute... could that be because all those things still exist today?
But it's not all doom and gloom. It also has Dickens's many shades of humor: silliness, word play, comic dialogue, preposterous characters with mocking names, and of course a constant satirical edge. It also has anger and passion and tenderness.
I will grant one thing: if you don't love reading enough to get into the flow of Dickens's sentences, you'll probably feel like the previous reviewer that "...it goes on and on, in interminable detail and description...". It's a different dance rhythm folks, but well worth getting used to. If you have to, work your way up to it. Don't start with a biggie like Bleak House, start with one of his wonderful short pieces such as A Christmas Carol.
Dickens was a gifted storyteller and Bleak House is his masterpiece. If you love to dive into a book, read and enjoy this gem!