Charles Dickens, Claire Tomalin
Charles Dickens, Claire Tomalin
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Charles Dickens
A Life

Author: Claire Tomalin

Narrator: Alex Jennings

Unabridged: 16 hr 29 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 06/18/2012


Synopsis

When Charles Dickens died in 1870, The Times of London successfully campaigned for his burial in Westminster Abbey, the final resting place of England's kings and heroes. Thousands flocked to mourn the best recognized and loved man of nineteenth-century England. His books had made them laugh, shown them the squalor and greed of English life, and also the power of personal virtue and the strength of ordinary people. In his last years Dickens drew adoring crowds to his public appearances, had met presidents and princes, and had amassed a fortune.

Like a hero from his novels, Dickens trod a hard path to greatness. Born into a modest middle-class family, his young life was overturned when his profligate father was sent to debtors' prison and Dickens was forced into harsh and humiliating factory work. Yet through these early setbacks he developed his remarkable eye for all that was absurd, tragic, and redemptive in London life. He set out to succeed, and with extraordinary speed and energy made himself into the greatest English novelist of the century.

Years later Dickens's daughter wrote to the author George Bernard Shaw, "If you could make the public understand that my father was not a joyous, jocose gentleman walking about the world with a plum pudding and a bowl of punch, you would greatly oblige me." Seen as the public champion of household harmony, Dickens tore his own life apart, betraying, deceiving, and breaking with friends and family while he pursued an obsessive love affair.

Charles Dickens: A Life gives full measure to Dickens's heroic stature—his huge virtues both as a writer and as a human being— while observing his failings in both respects with an unblinking eye. Renowned literary biographer Claire Tomalin crafts a story worthy of Dickens's own pen, a comedy that turns to tragedy as the very qualities that made him great—his indomitable energy, boldness, imagination, and showmanship—finally destroyed him. The man who emerges is one of extraordinary contradictions, whose vices and virtues were intertwined as surely as his life and his art.

About Claire Tomalin

Claire Tomalin is the author of eight highly acclaimed biographies, including Thomas Hardy and Samuel Pepys: The Unequaled Self, which won the 2002 Whitbread Book of the Year Award. She has previously won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for Biography, the Whitbread First Novel Award, the Hawthornden Prize, the NCR Book Award for Non-Fiction, and the Whitbread Biography Award. Educated at Cambridge University, she served as literary editor of the New Statesman and the Sunday Times (London). Tomalin lives in London and is married to the playwright Michael Frayn.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Rick

Some books sit on my shelf for a long time before I finally find the right moment to read them. Reading a biography of Dickens may not be for everyone, but after looking at this book on my shelf for about five years, I finally pulled it down and began reading. It was well worth my time. Not only doe......more

Goodreads review by Alok

This is a well-recorded biography that needs to go down in history as the great novelist himself. However, I will not call Dickens the greatest novelist of England by any means as the book's introduction says. His life has been narrated in a subtle manner and this gives the readers comprehensive inf......more

Goodreads review by Glenn

Nothing can take away my love for books like Great Expectations, David Copperfield, Oliver Twist and A Christmas Carol. But Claire Tomalin's dreary, lacklustre biography has dampened my enthusiasm for the man who wrote them. Sure, I didn't expect Dickens to be a saint. I knew about the author's sepa......more