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OXFORD ILLUSTRATED DICKENS
HARD TIMES
(CHARLES
DICKENS)
With four
illustrations by F. Walker and Maurice Greiffenhagen, and an introduction by Dingle
Foot
\u2018Hard Times\u2019
was originally printed as a serial in Nos. 210-29 of \u2018Household Words\u2019 from
April to August 1854 and was first issued in book form (as a single volume) in
the same year.
From the
introduction:
\u201CThe real
explanation (as I believe) why \u2018Hard Times\u2019 differs so widely from most of
Dickens\u2019s other books is simply that he was working in an unfamiliar milieu. We are told that in order to get some local
colour for his story he went to Preston during a strike and was thoroughly
bored and depressed. The best thing in \u2018Hard
Times\u2019 are the descriptions of Coketown itself.
They convey with masterly realism the repulsive aspect of a Lancashire
manufacturing town during the 1850s. But
there the realism ends.&nb.
Please read item description
OXFORD ILLUSTRATED DICKENS
HARD TIMES
(CHARLES
DICKENS)
With four
illustrations by F. Walker and Maurice Greiffenhagen, and an introduction by Dingle
Foot
\u2018Hard Times\u2019
was originally printed as a serial in Nos. 210-29 of \u2018Household Words\u2019 from
April to August 1854 and was first issued in book form (as a single volume) in
the same year.
From the
introduction:
\u201CThe real
explanation (as I believe) why \u2018Hard Times\u2019 differs so widely from most of
Dickens\u2019s other books is simply that he was working in an unfamiliar milieu. We are told that in order to get some local
colour for his story he went to Preston during a strike and was thoroughly
bored and depressed. The best thing in \u2018Hard
Times\u2019 are the descriptions of Coketown itself.
They convey with masterly realism the repulsive aspect of a Lancashire
manufacturing town during the 1850s. But
there the realism ends.&nb.
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