"oliver twist" - читать интересную книгу автора (Cliff Notes)

BARRON'S BOOK NOTES CHARLES DICKENS'S OLIVER TWIST CHARLES DICKENS: THE AUTHOR AND HIS TIMES Few writers are lucky enough to have their first novels become runaway bestsellers. Yet that is exactly what happened when 25-year-old Charles Dickens published Oliver Twist in 1837. Many readers already knew of young Dickens. As a journalist, he had written, under the pen name Boz, gripping newspaper accounts exposing social conditions in England. In another vein entirely, he had written a bestselling collection of humorous stories called The Pickwick Papers. His journalistic sketches showed descriptive power and the ability to influence people's political ideas; The Pickwick Papers showed how he could create marvelous characters and sustain lively comic scenes. But with Oliver Twist, Dickens surprised everyone by revealing yet another talent--for spinning a rich, suspenseful web of plot. One reason why Oliver Twist was so popular was that Dickens understood what his audience wanted to read and was willing to write it. He gave them sentimental love scenes, a horrifying glimpse of the criminal underworld, a virtuous hero in Oliver, and nasty
villains in Bill Sikes and Fagin. And he wrapped it all up in a complicated, puzzling mystery story. Because Oliver Twist was published in monthly installments, Dickens could leave his readers in agonizing suspense from month to month. All across England, readers eagerly discussed what had happened in the most recent installment and argued over what they thought would happen in the next one. Oliver Twist was a part of everyday conversation, just as top-rated television shows are for us today. Yet, even though he was young and hungry for fame, Dickens wanted to do more than just entertain. He challenged his readers to consider things they would rather have ignored. He drew for them a picture of London's slums that was shocking in its realism. Victorian authors were not supposed to acknowledge the existence of drunkards and prostitutes, but Dickens did. They were not supposed to use street language, even in dialogue, but Dickens did. Dickens wasn't the only one concerned about the poor, for poverty and vagrancy had plagued England since the sixteenth century. In 1834, a few years before the publication of Oliver Twist, Parliament had passed a Poor Law intended to end some of the worst abuses against the indigent. Yet the provision of the bill didn't go far in providing relief for those who were suffering. Dickens wanted to do something about the shameful poverty in England.