David Copperfield (Oxford World's Classics)

David Copperfield (Oxford World's Classics)

by Charles Dickens (Author), Andrew Sanders (Contributor), Charles Dickens (Author), Charles Dickens (Author), Andrew Sanders (Contributor), Charles Dickens (Author), Nina Burgis (Editor)

Synopsis

'I have in my heart of hearts a favourite child. And his name is DAVID COPPERFIELD,' wrote Dickens of what is the most personal, certainly one of the most popular, of all his novels. Dickens wrote the book after the completion of a fragment of autobiography recalling his employment as a child in a London warehouse, and in the first-person narrative, a new departure for him, realized marvellously the workings of memory. The embodiment of his boyhood experience in the novel involved a 'complicated interweaving of truth and fiction', at its most subtle in the portrait of his father as Mr Micawber, one of Dickens's greatest comic creations. Enjoying a humour that never becomes caricature, the reader shares David's affection for the eccentric Betsey Trotwood and her protege Mr Dick, and smiles with the narrator at the trials he endures in his love for the delightfully silly Dora. Settings, (East Anglia, the London of the 1820s), people, and events are unified by their relationship to the story of Steerforth's treachery, which reaches its powerful climax in the storm scene.This edition, which has the accurate Clarendon text, includes Dickens's trial titles and working notes, and eight of the original illustrations by 'Phiz'.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 944
Edition: New
Publisher: Oxford Paperbacks
Published: 11 Feb 1999

ISBN 10: 0192835785
ISBN 13: 9780192835789

Media Reviews
Introduction and notes by Andrew Sanders facilitated a proper understanding of period details and plot structure. I will continue to use this edition in future classes on Dickens's novels. Helge Nowak, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universtitaet