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Charles Dickens

Literature / Writers Datebook: February 7 


Famous for A Christmas Carol and David Copperfield


Considered the greatest English novelist, Charles Dickens is the most famous of all British novelists and best known for all-time booksellers Oliver Twist, A Christmas Carol, David Copperfield, Bleak House, A Tale of Two Cities, and Great Expectations – all of them, also made into film. Dickens is remembered for his lively inventions of comic, good and bad characters in London's 19th century tales set. He was a prolific writer.       

Early Life of Charles Dickens

Charles John Huffam Dickens, (b. Feb 7, 1812 - d. June 9, 1870), was born at Portsmouth during the new industrial age that made businessmen rich but brought great hardships to millions of low-paid workers. His father, John, was a badly-paid clerk in the Navy Office, later sent to a debtors' prison for the kind Dickens later described in Little Dorrit.


Effect of Financial Hardships

Dickens had an unsettled childhood. At Chatham where he studied, a schoolmaster recognized his talent and gave him a particular attention. He loved to read and particularly, liked the works of Cervantes, Smollett and Fielding. Due to financial difficulties, his father was imprisoned for bad debts, and two days after his 12th birthday he was put to work in Warren's blacking factory, a humiliating experience which he nursed in memory to the end of his life.

Writing Career and Personal Life

He left school at fourteen, and soon became a newspaper reporter in London. A sharp ear for conversation helped him reveal characters through their own words. Ten years later, he became famous for The Pickwick Papers. These stories about a group of rather odd individuals and their amusing adventures came out in monthly parts, as did most of his later novels.
During the 1830s, he wrote sketches for a variety of journals, one was edited by his friend George Hogarth. Dickens married Catherine Hogarth, his eldest daughter. They had ten children but parted in later years. Besides writing novels, he also edited weekly magazines and travelled in Britain and America, giving public readings of his works.

Outside literature, among others, Dickens indulged his love for the theatre and his interest in social problems. He died aged 58.    

Dickens' Best Known Books 

Among his best known books is A Christmas Carol, about a cruel miser who becomes kind and generous. His finest novel is arguably Bleak House, which attacks long, drawn out lawsuits and other injustices. The books reveal great humour and warmth, and by pointing out social evil they helped bring about laws that improved poor people's working and living conditions.  


Link:  Literature - Charles Dickens. The School of Life. Accessed February 7, 2018. 

Major Works: 

The Pickwick Papers, 1836-37
Oliver Twist, 1837-39
Nicholas Nickleby, 1838-39
A Christmas Carol, 1843
Martin Chuzzlewit, 1843-44
Pictures from Italy, 1845
David Copperfield, 1849-50
Bleak House, 1852-53
Hard Times, 1854
Little Dorrit, 1855-57
A Tale of Two Cities, 1859
Great Expectations, 1860-61


Dickens' Quotes:

40 Straighforward Quotes by Charles Dickens.  Magical Quote.

Resources:
Cambridge Guide to Literature in English by Ian Ousby (1993)
Larousse Dictionary of Writers, edited by Rosemary Goring (1994)
  

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