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9781593081744

Oliver Twist

Oliver Twist
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  • ISBN-13: 9781593081744
  • ISBN: 159308174X
  • Publication Date: 2005
  • Publisher: Sterling Pub Co Inc

AUTHOR

Dickens, Charles, Muller, Jill, Cruikshank, George

SUMMARY

From Jill Muller's Introduction toOliver Twist Second novels separate the sheep from the goats, the possessors of enduring talent from the mere purveyors of flash-in-the-pan literary sensation. Many writers embark on a second novel with a good deal of trepidation, especially if their first book has achieved the kind of instant acclaim awarded to Charles Dickens'sPickwick Papers. If Dickens experienced any such anxiety when he set out to writeOliver Twist, he countered it with his lifelong drug of choice, a frenetic and compulsive productivity. Appearing in monthly installments, the usual mode of publication for novels until late in the nineteenth century,Oliver Twistwas mostly written in tandem with other projects. When the first two chapters were published in Bentley's Miscellany in February 1837, Dickens was still writingPickwick Papersas a serial for Chapman and Hall. WithPickwick Paperscompleted in November 1837, the twenty-five-year-old Dickens devoted himself toOliver Twistfor a mere four months before beginning a third novel,Nicholas Nickleby.Oliver Twistwas finished and published in three volumes in November 1838, while the serial version in Bentley's still had five months to run. This frenzied pace of production was halted only once, in June 1837, when the intensity of his grief over the sudden death of his seventeen-year-old sister-in-law, Mary Hogarth, forced Dickens to postpone that month's installments of bothPickwick PapersandOliver Twist. Mary Hogarth is memorialized as Rose Maylie inOliver Twist. Where many young writers would have been tempted to stay with a winning formula, Dickens's second novel was a total departure from the timeless comedic world ofPickwick Papers. The first three installments ofOliver Twistemployed ferocious satire to address a contemporary social evil, the sufferings of the poor in the new workhouses mandated by the 1834 Poor Law Amendment Act. Then, with the introduction of Fagin and his gang of juvenile pickpockets in the fourth installment, Dickens's readers found themselves plunged into London's criminal underworld. The novel's final installment contained a gruesome murder, a manhunt, and a hanging. While a few readers, such as the Prime Minister, Lord Melbourne, were shocked by Dickens's turn to such sordid subject matter, many more, including nineteen-year-old Queen Victoria, were enthralled.Oliver Twistwas every bit as popular asPickwick Papers. Three dramatizations played in London theaters during the winter of 1838-1839. Perfectly complemented by George Cruikshank's quirky illustrations, the novel was in a third edition by 1841, and even spawned an imitation, Thomas Prest'sOliver Twiss. It remained a bestseller through Dickens's lifetime and beyond. The penny edition of 1871 sold 150,000 copies in three weeks. During the last decade of his life, Dickens toured England, Ireland, and America, giving public readings of favorite sections from his novels. "Sikes and Nancy," based on chapter XLVII ofOliver Twist, was a particular favorite of both author and audience. While Dickens's rendition of Nancy's brutal murder sent audiences into fits of screaming and fainting, a physician waited backstage to monitor the ailing author's pulse rate. Dickens's friend and biographer John Forster speculated that the energy and fervor with which Dickens threw himself into these performances may have contributed to his early death from heart disease in 1870. Oliver Twistremains one of the best known and most popular of Dickens's novels. Translated, adapted, dramatized, filmed (most notably by David Lean in 1948), and even turned into a musical, the story of Little Orphan Oliver and his grotesque tormentors has passed into popular culture. Millions of people who have never opened the nineteenth-century novel are familiar wDickens, Charles is the author of 'Oliver Twist ', published 2005 under ISBN 9781593081744 and ISBN 159308174X.

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