Synopses & Reviews
Dickens' second historical novel, which he considered "the best story I have written," provides a highly-charged examination of human suffering and human sacrifice. Private experience and public history paralled one another as the political activities and personal responsibilities of these fictional characters, during the French Revolution, draw them into the Paris of the Terror.
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Review
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Synopsis
Dickens' second historical novel, which he considered "the best story I have written," provides a highly-charged examination of human suffering and human sacrifice. Private experience and public history paralled one another as the political activities and personal responsibilities of these fictional characters, during the French Revolution, draw them into the Paris of the Terror.
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About the Author
Andrew Sanders is a lecturer in English at Birkbeck College, London. He is Honorary Editor of
The Dickensian, and editor of
Barry Lyndon by William Makepeace Thackerary, and
Sylvia's Lovers by Mrs Gaskell, both in The World's Classics series.