Oliver Twist: Introduction by Michael Slater [Hardcover]

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  • Category: Books (Fiction)
  • Author:  Dickens, Charles
  • Author:  Dickens, Charles
  • ISBN-10:  0679417249
  • ISBN-10:  0679417249
  • ISBN-13:  9780679417248
  • ISBN-13:  9780679417248
  • Publisher:  Everyman's Library
  • Publisher:  Everyman's Library
  • Pages:  528
  • Pages:  528
  • Binding:  Hardcover
  • Binding:  Hardcover
  • Pub Date:  01-Jun-1992
  • Pub Date:  01-Jun-1992
  • SKU:  0679417249-11-SPLV
  • SKU:  0679417249-11-SPLV
  • Item ID: 100519573
  • List Price: $28.00
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Oliver is an orphan living on the dangerous London streets with no one but himself to rely on. Fleeing from poverty and hardship, he falls in with a criminal street gang who will not let him go, however hard he tries to escape.

One of the most swiftly moving and unified of Charles Dickens’s great novels,Oliver Twistis also famous for its re-creation–through the splendidly realized figures of Fagin, Nancy, the Artful Dodger, and the evil Bill Sikes–of the vast London underworld of pickpockets, thieves, prostitutes, and abandoned children. Victorian critics took Dickens to task for rendering this world in such a compelling, believable way, but readers over the last 150 years have delivered an alternative judgment by making this story of the orphaned Oliver Twist one of its author’s most loved works.

This edition reprints the original Everyman’s introduction by G. K. Chesterton and includes twenty-four illustrations by George Cruikshank.

Charles Dickens was born in a little house in Landport, Portsea, England, on February 7, 1812. The second of eight children, he grew up in a family frequently beset by financial insecurity. At age eleven, Dickens was taken out of school and sent to work in London backing warehouse, where his job was to paste labels on bottles for six shillings a week. His father John Dickens, was a warmhearted but improvident man. When he was condemned the Marshela Prison for unpaid debts, he unwisely agreed that Charles should stay in lodgings and continue working while the rest of the family joined him in jail. This three-month separation caused Charles much pain; his experiences as a child alone in a huge city–cold, isolated with barely enough to eat–haunted him for the rest of his life.

When the family fortunes improved, Charles went back to school, after which he became an office boy, a freelance reporter and finally an author. With Pickwick Papers (1836-7lÓ.

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