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Dickens by Peter Ackroyd
Dickens by Peter Ackroyd










He was reading newspapers by the age of 5 and, at 9, wrote a play about Guy Fawkes. Peter Ackroyd's mother worked in the personnel department of an engineering firm, his father having left the family home when Ackroyd was a baby. Peter Ackroyd CBE is an English novelist and biographer with a particular interest in the history and culture of London. Although he insisted that nothing in the newspapers he edited should offend his middle-class readers, he regularly indulged in dubious night-time escapades with fellow-author Wilkie Collins and, for the final 13 years of his life, kept a secret mistress, Ellen Ternan. Like many eminent Victorians, he led a double life. He apparently had everything - fame, success, wealth - but he died harbouring the great sadness he had carried with him all his life, and he was humble enough to forbid a grand funeral. Ackroyd highlights the reality of Victorian life, warts and all, and the issues that sparked Dickens's fervent calls for social reform and he also charts the influential landmarks of that era, such as the coming of the railways, the effects upon society of the industrial revolution and the expansion of the British Empire. Dickens's novels brim with they are located in the places he lived in and visited, peopled with characters he knew, and inspired by the preoccupations that haunted his mind.

Dickens by Peter Ackroyd Dickens by Peter Ackroyd

Here the author offers a fresh view of Dickens's remarkable life story.

Dickens by Peter Ackroyd

Indeed, Dickens drew strongly on his own experiences as the source for much of his fiction. Charles Dickens's life is a story of rags to riches, complete with bankruptcy, prison, forced child labour, and fame and fortune overshadowed by guilt and secrecy - rather like the plot of one of his novels.












Dickens by Peter Ackroyd