Synopses & Reviews
Two centuries after his birth, Charles Dickens remains a beloved author whose works seem timeless--yet if ever a man was the product of his times, it was he. The virtues and vices of the Victorian Age Dickensand#160;so memorably set forth mirrored his own life, from his poverty-stricken childhood to his dizzying rise to fame.and#160; In
The World of Charles Dickens, eminent scholar Martin Fido traces that complex and fascinating history in all its drama, tragedy, and triumph.
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Synopsis
Oliver Twist, A Tale of Two Cities, Great Expectations, David Copperfield are just some of the novels that made Charles Dickens an internationally celebrated author.
About the Author
Martin Fido was Andrew Bradley Junior Research Fellow in English Literature at Balliol College, Oxford, and thereafter taught English at the Universities of Leeds and the West Indies. His short illustrated life of Dickens (Hamlyn 1970) was hailed by the
Dickensian magazine as one of the two best books marking the centenary of Dickens's death. Martin has published widely on other nineteenth century novelists such as Thackeray, Disraeli, and Jane Austen. His translation of Louis Cazamian's
Le Roman Social en Angleterre was nominated for the Scott Moncrieff Prize. Martin lives in Kent, the heart of Dickens country.