![]() ![]() ![]() Frame offers a convincing recreation of the iconic Dickens character, but his tale suffers from centering on such an unappealing protagonist. Charles Dickens never revealed Miss Havishams backstory in Great Expectations, but Ronald Frame fills in the blanks with his illuminating prequel, Havisham. After adopting a young girl, Estella, Catherine ages into the cynical spinster depicted in Great Expectations. /rebates/2f97805712882982fHavisham-Ronald-Frame-05712882942fplp&. However, Charles jilts his would-be bride, and Catherine’s life descends into seclusion and a slow madness she wears only her wedding dress while living in the decaying mansion. ![]() ![]() She becomes engaged to Charles, who wants to manage the Havisham brewery. She falls in love with the dashing racetrack gambler Charles Compeyson, and Joseph dies, leaving her the brewery. Joseph, a widower, sparks his teenage daughter’s resentment by disclosing he has remarried, though his second wife has since died, and Catherine also comes to loathe her ne’er-do-well half-brother, Arthur, after he begins living with them. Like The purple haze of the wych elms the blue flash of a kingfisher’s wings the statuesque rightness of the milch cows in that green place chomping on the rich flood-grass. Catherine Havisham grows up in privilege and leisure at the imposing Satis House, courtesy of her affluent father, Joseph, who runs the most prosperous brewery in North Kent and ships her off to the aristocratic Chadwyck family to polish her social graces. This stylish but dour “prelude” to Charles Dickens’s classic Great Expectations comes from Glaswegian dramatist and author Frame (The Lantern Bearers). ![]()
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