Dickens and the Workhouse

About The Book

It's one of the best known scenes in all of literature--young Oliver Twist with empty bowl in hand asking Please Sir. I want some more. In <em>Dickens and the Workhouse</em> historian Ruth Richardson recounts how she discovered the building that was quite possibly the model for the workhouse in Dickens' classic novel. Indeed Richardson reveals that Dickens himself lived only a few doors down from this notorious building--once as a child and once again as a young journalist. This book offers a colorful portrait of London in Dickens' time looking at life in the streets and in the workhouse itself. Illustrated with maps documents photos and illustrations this fascinating book provides an engaging blend of history biography and literary criticism rooted in hitherto largely unexplored historical sources in Dickens' own fiction and journalism and in works of biography and criticism. Richardson's discovery made headlines worldwide. Published on the 200th anniversary of Dickens' birth <em>Dickens and the Workhouse</em> offers an intriguing glimpse of one of the great literary figures of the Victorian Age.<br>
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Piracy-free
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