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Our Mutual Friend by Charles Dickens (w/ Illustrations, Active Table of Contents and Chapter Navigation)[KINDLE EDITION] (Kindle Edition)

June 1st, 2010

Our Mutual Friend by Charles Dickens (w/ Illustrations, Active Table of Contents and Chapter Navigation)[KINDLE EDITION]

Product Description

Our Mutual Friend (written in the years 1864–65) is the last novel completed by Charles Dickens and is in many ways one of his most sophisticated works, combining deep psychological insight with rich social analysis. At one level it centres on, in the words of critic J. Hillis Miller, “money, money, money, and what money can make of life” but in a deeper sense it also about ‘human values’. In the opening chapter, a young man is on his way to receive his inheritance, which, according to his father’s will, he can claim only if he marries Bella Wilfer, a beautiful, mercenary girl whom he has never met. However, before he can arrive, a body is found in the Thames and identified as him. The money passes on, instead, to the working-class Boffins, and the effects spread throughout various corners of London society.

(Wikipedia)


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Little Dorrit by Charles Dickens (w/ Illustrations, Active Table of Contents and Chapter Navigation) [KINDLE EDITION] (Kindle Edition)

May 5th, 2010

Little Dorrit by Charles Dickens (w/ Illustrations, Active Table of Contents and Chapter Navigation) [KINDLE EDITION]

Product Description

Little Dorrit is a serial novel by Charles Dickens published originally between 1855 and 1857. It is a work of satire on the shortcomings of the government and society of the period.

Much of Dickens’ ire is focused upon the institutions of debtors’ prisons—in which people who owed money were imprisoned, unable to work, until they repaid their debts. The representative prison in this case is the Marshalsea where the author’s own father had been imprisoned.

Most of Dickens’ other critiques in this particular novel concern the social safety net: industry, and the treatment and safety of workers; the bureaucracy of the British Treasury (as figured in the fictional “Circumlocution Office” [Bk. 1, Ch. 10]); and the separation of people based on the lack of intercourse between the classes.

(Wikipedia)


Buy Little Dorrit by Charles Dickens (w/ Illustrations, Active Table of Contents and Chapter Navigation) [KINDLE EDITION] (Kindle Edition) at Amazon

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