Copperfield has a hard to feel for the distresses of his fellow creatures when they are behind the cloud. Still, my advice is so far worth taking that in short I have never taken it myself and the... Here Mr Macabre checked himself and frowned. He had been beaming and smiling all over his head and face after the present moment. The miserable crech that you behold. My dear Macabre quite forgetting himself and smiling again. "I shall never master copperfield. I am hotly expecting"
Dickens. Tolstoy. Their names and reputations shake the ground – and so do their books, if you drop one. But whose legacy is more enduring? Whose vision truer and more relevant today? Should you embark on War and Peace or Our Mutual Friend? To battle it out, in 2018 Intelligence Squared brought two celebrated writers, John Mullan for Dickens and Simon Schama for Tolstoy, to our stage. They called on a cast of star actors, including Tom Hiddleston, to bring their arguments to life with readings from the authors’ finest works. The debate was chaired by author, playwright and broadcaster Bonnie Greer. This is the first instalment of a three-part episode.
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