The Essentials: Charles Dickens
What are the must-read books written by and about the famed British author?
- By Megan Gambino
- Smithsonian.com, January 17, 2012, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
From Douglas-Fairhurst: If Dickens invented the modern celebration of Christmas, Chesterton almost single-handedly invented the modern celebration of Dickens. What he relishes above all in Dickens’ writing is its joyful prodigality, and his own book comes close to matching Dickens in its energy and good humor. There have been many hundreds of books on Dickens written since Chesterton’s, but few are as lively or significant. Almost every sentence is a quotable gem.
The Violent Effigy: A Study of Dickens’ Imagination (1973, rev. ed. 2008), by John Carey
When the University of Oxford expanded its English curriculum to include literature written after the 1830s, professor and literary critic John Carey began to deliver lectures on Charles Dickens. These lectures eventually turned into a book, The Violent Effigy, which attempts to guide readers, unpretentiously, through Dickens’ fertile imagination.
From Douglas-Fairhurst: This brilliantly iconoclastic study starts from the premise that “we could scrap all the solemn parts of Dickens’ novels without impairing his status as a writer,” and sets out to celebrate the strange poetry of his imagination instead. Rather than a solemn treatise on Dickens’ symbolism, we are reminded of his obsession with masks and wooden legs; rather than viewing Dickens as a serious social critic, we are presented with a showman and comedian who “did not want to provoke … reform so much as to retain a large and lucrative audience.” It is the funniest book on Dickens ever written.
Dickens (1990), by Peter Ackroyd
This tome of 1,000-plus pages by Peter Ackroyd, a biographer who has also made Ezra Pound and T. S. Eliot his subjects, captures the nonfiction—or life and times of Charles Dickens—that the writer often wove into his fiction.
From Douglas-Fairhurst: When Peter Ackroyd’s huge biography of Dickens was first published, it was attacked by some reviewers for what they saw as its self-indulgent postmodern tricks, including fictional dialogues in which Ackroyd conversed with his subject. Yet such passages are central to a book in which Ackroyd involves himself sympathetically in every aspect of Dickens’ life. As a result, you finish this book feeling not just that you know more about Dickens, but that you actually know him. A biography that rivals Dickens’ novels for its rich cast of characters, sprawling plot and unpredictable swerves between realism and romance.
Other Dickens: Pickwick to Chuzzlewit (1999), by John Bowen
John Bowen, now a professor of 19th-century literature at England’s University of York, casts his eye toward Dickens’ early works, written from 1836 to 1844. He argues that novels such as The Pickwick Papers, Oliver Twist and Martin Chuzzlewit redefined fiction in the way that they broach politics and comedy.
From Douglas-Fairhurst: During Dickens’ lifetime they were by far his most popular works, and it was only in the 20th century that readers developed a preference for the later, darker novels. John Bowen’s study shows why we should return to them, and what they look like when viewed through modern critical eyes. It is a superbly readable and detailed piece of literary detective work.
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Comments (4)
For alll it is worth, thanks again unto all. After all, I am and was glad to drop by to see as to all that was going on as of here and now.
Posted by Heather Hascehau on February 21,2012 | 02:07 PM
I too was thrilled to see this article! I had just finished reading David Copperfield for the first time and loved it. I'm now on to Great Expectations. I'm a librarian and may even try to plan a Dickens Film & Book Club. Nice to know there are others out there who are fascinated by him.
Posted by Carrie Watts on February 11,2012 | 04:56 PM
How delighted I was to see in the mail current issue of Smithsonian and "Mad About Dickens" article.
I promptly put on reserve two of his wonderful works, Barnaby Rudge and Great Expectations. My library is quite small but they order from outside.
And have put on my bucket list to visit Theme Park.
Sandra Kiser
Guadalupe, AZ
Posted by Sandra Kiser on January 23,2012 | 04:39 PM
Where's David Copperfield, the novel that Dickens himself called his "favourite child."
Posted by John Rogers on January 21,2012 | 01:25 PM