StoryDragon reviewed The picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde (Wordsworth classics)
Review of The Picture of Dorian Gray
4 stars
The Picture of Dorian Gray contains several amounts of humour and paradoxes. I quite liked reading it.
paperback, 124 pages
Published Jan. 1, 2005 by Digireads.com.
A remarkably handsome youth, Dorian Gray, meets Lord Henry Wotton and is corrupted into a life of terrible evil. Granted eternal youth, Dorian Gray lives a wild, dissipated life while his portrait grows old and haggard. Oscar Wilde's story of a fashionable young man who sells his soul for eternal youth and beauty is one of his most popular works.
The Picture of Dorian Gray contains several amounts of humour and paradoxes. I quite liked reading it.
Originally I was listening to a LibreVox version, but since there are a lot of dialogues, it was difficult for me to keep tabs on who’s speaking if without good dramatisation, and I got confused all the time as to who’s said what, so I joined the audible membership.
Russell’s dramatisation is ingeniously done and is I think by far the best one. Each character a distinct tone, accent and rhythm.