
THE LIFE - OF
THE LIFE - OF - CHARLES DICKENS - BY - JOHN FORSTER. VOL. I. 1812-1842.
NOTE TO THE PRESENT EDITION.
THE LIFE - OF - CHARLES DICKENS.
CHAPTER I. - CHILDHOOD - 1812-1822.
CHAPTER II. - HARD EXPERIENCES IN BOYHOOD. - 1822-1824.
CHAPTER III. - SCHOOL-DAYS AND START IN LIFE. - 1824-1830.
CHAPTER IV. - REPORTERS' GALLERY AND NEWSPAPER LITERATURE. - 1831-1835.
CHAPTER V. - FIRST BOOK, AND ORIGIN OF PICKWICK. - 1836.
CHAPTER VI. - WRITING THE PICKWICK PAPERS. - 1837.
A vivid portrait opens with Dickens’s modest beginnings in Portsmouth, where his father’s naval clerk job and a bustling household of eight children set the stage for a childhood marked by both hardship and imagination. The narrative highlights his early fascination with reading, theatre, and the vivid observations that would later color his storytelling, recalling moments from school recitations to the grim visit to his father’s debtors’ prison. Through these recollections, the biography paints a picture of a keen, observant youngster whose talent for turning everyday scenes into compelling tales was already stirring.
As the story moves forward, the focus shifts to the formative years that shaped his character—his mother’s perseverance, the influence of his sister’s musical pursuits, and the stark contrasts between London’s streets and the world of literature he devoured. The early chapters reveal how these experiences forged the empathy and humor that would define his later works, offering listeners a glimpse into the making of the author whose name would soon dominate the Victorian literary scene.
Language
en
Duration
~37 hours (2168K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Emmy, Juliet Sutherland, Andrew Templeton and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2008-06-20
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1812–1876
Best known as Charles Dickens’s close friend, adviser, and first major biographer, he was a central figure in Victorian literary London. His own writing ranged from criticism and history to biography, with a reputation for sharp judgment and deep knowledge of the writers around him.
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