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Charles Dickens,: His tragedy and triumph
by Edgar Johnson
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Little, Brown (1965)
ISBN: B0007E3RRC
Unknown Binding
SKU: 22345
Condition: Collectable Good
Comments: Schuster, 1952. 1ST EDITION. UNABRIDGED! Volume 1. HARDCOVER W/GILT LETTERING, DUST JACKET AND PAGES ARE IN GOOD CONDITION. Rapid shipping w/FREE tracking. Overseas by Airmail.
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Customer Reviews
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A Fine Concise Version of the Landmark Two Volume Biography
Rating (5)
Date: 2008-12-08
1 out of 1 customers found this reveiw helpful
It's the time of year when people start watching plays and broadcasts of Charles Dickens evergreen story "A Christmas Carol" - if you haven't read the short novel since childhood try looking it up for an unsurpassed piece of prose writing - and so here's a gentle reminder about the great Dicken's biography of Edgar Johnson. Though not the last word in Dickens scholarship - Edgar Johnson's final book on Dickens was published over three decades ago - this venerable abridged one volume biography (from the much larger 1952 two volume version) certainly remains a fine introduction to both the life and works of the larger than life English novelist.
Among this biography's most noticeable charms is the author's clarity, a quality most prized by another 19th century titan, Richard Wagner. Despite a true biographical embarrassment of riches in Dickens, Johnson restrains his subject from roaring off in a thousand different directions like one of Dicken's more peripatetic characters, and the biography focuses on framing events around a strictly chronological flow. Johnson balances the events of Dickens' life against the backdrop of the times while giving fair play to the constant outpourings of literature. Yet there is never the sense that you are reading a simplified summary or heavily edited or truncated version of a larger more developed work. Johnson has achieved a fine synthesis of his big book, and the whole moves nicely along without signs of excessive forcing or gaps. Dickens' concerns about his family and his touching concerns about his sons' careers are tied together with Dickens' own memories with their deeply embedded and near manic fears and doubts caused by his father's financial troubles. Johnson shows us how this lead up to and aggravated Dickens' forcing on himself a nearly manical late and ultimately self-destructive series of physically exhausting theatrical tours. I can think of no work that more effectively conveys the major events of Dicken's life in a single volume without brutal trimmings.
Readers who wish a larger scale work can turn to Edgar Johnson's massive two volume biography, CHARLES DICKENS HIS TRAGEDY AND TRIUMPH BY EDGAR JOHNSON (VOLUME 1 AND 2) running over a thousand pages; although a large work it's never an effort, but rather a joy to read; the rare 1,000 page biography that never falls prey to excessive minutiae, as is sadly evident in too many modern biographies of literary figures. (I'm thinking especially of the Parker biography of Melville.) The original larger version is not as up to date as the later shortened version, though the two volume biography does offer lengthy essays on Dicken's works, incorporated somewhat in the more recent abridged version, as well as noticeably more copious indexes, apendixes, etc.
A nice bargain if you can find it, this abridged version is wholly satisfactory for most readers, and is not only a pleasure to read, but a fine carefully thought out work that does not short-change its subject.
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Seek it out
Rating (5)
Date: 1999-03-04
11 out of 11 customers found this reveiw helpful
This exhaustive two-volume tome set the standard for twentieth century biography, and belongs on the shelf of every well-read Dickens fan or public library. Great for researching, critical analysis, or enjoyment of this monumental life.
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