Mr. Pickwick's Christmas


Book Description

Mr. Pickwick's Christmas tells about the Pickwickian's adventures at the Manor Farm during winter holidays. A good-humored Christmas chapter, containing an account of a wedding, and some other sports beside, which although in their way, even as good customs as marriage itself, are not quite so religiously kept up, in these degenerate times. It also contains the story of the Goblins who stole a Sexton and tale on how the Pickwickians made and cultivated the acquaintance of a couple of nice young men belonging to one of the liberal professions; how they disported themselves on the ice; and how their visit came to a conclusion.




Death and Mr Pickwick


Book Description

Shortlisted for the HWA Goldsboro Debut Crown It is 31 March 1836. A new monthly periodical is launched entitled The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club. Conceived and created by the artist Robert Seymour, it contains four of his illustrations. The words to accompany them are written by a young journalist, under the pen-name Boz. The journalist's real name is Charles Dickens. The Pickwick Papers soon becomes a phenomenal, unprecedented sensation, read and discussed by the entire British Isles. Before long, its success is worldwide. Stephen Jarvis's novel tells of the dawning of the age of global celebrity. It is a story of colossal triumph and of the depths of tragedy, based on real events - and an expose of how an ambitious young writer stole another man's ideas.




The Story of the Goblins Who Stole a Sexton


Book Description

A Charles Dickens short story that was actually the inspiration for "A Christmas Carol." In this story, a gravedigger that hates Christmas gets kidnapped by goblins while digging a grave and then they help him get into the Christmas spirit. The beginning of this version has a biography of the author.







MR PICKWICK'S CHRISTMAS - the Pickwickians spend Christmas at Manor Farm in Dingley Dell


Book Description

MR. PICKWICK'S CHRISTMAS is an account of the Pickwickians' Christmas at the manor farm in Dingley Dell near Rochester, Kent; and of the adventures they have there one Christmas. The first adventure is The Tale of the Goblin who stole a sexton; the second tells of The famous sports on ice, as written in the Pickwick Papers. a novel by Charles Dickens. This small volume has been illustrated in colour and Pen-and-ink by George Alfred Williams. This is a fun little Christmas book. Enjoyable to read out loud during the Christmas season and a welcome change to Dickens’ staple of modern Christmases worldwide - A Christmas Carol. ------------------------- KEYWORDS/TAGS: Mr Pickwick’s Christmas, Pickwickians, Tale, stole, steal, sports, on ice, Victorian, Christmas, Pickwick Papers, Charles Dickens, George Alfred, Williams, assemble, Furnival’s Inn, Pickwick Club, proofsheets, Posthumous, Papers, Pickwick Club, action, adventures, Allen, ancient, anxiety, Arabella, astonishment, barrels, behind, Bella, Ben, Benjamin, black, Bob, bottom, boy, brandy, breakfast, ceremony, chain, cheerful, children, Christmas, church-yard, coach, coachman, cod-fish, cold, countenance, couple, crowded, Emily, Emma, extraordinary, fire, Gabriel, gentlemen, gloves, goblin, grave, Grub, happy, hearts, hearty, honour, horses, ice, king, kissed, kitchen, lady, lantern, laughter, Manor house, mistletoe, Muggleton, number, pleasure, poor, pretty, proposed, Sam, Sawbones, Sawyer, season, servants, sexton, sexton, skaits, skates,smile, Snodgrass, snow, snow, spirits, tombstone, Trundle, Tupman, Wardle, watch, wedding, Weller, wicker, wine, Winkle, world, zeal, Queen, Samuel Pickwick,







A Literary Christmas


Book Description

This seasonal compendium collects together poems, short stories, and prose extracts by some of the greatest poets and writers in the English language. Like Charles Dickens's ghosts of Christmas Past and Present, they are representative of times old and new--from John Donne's Elizabethan hymn over the baby Jesus to Benjamin Zephaniah's "Talking Turkeys," from Thomas Tusser counting the cost of a Tudor feast to P. G. Wodehouse's wry story about Christmas on a diet. Enjoy a Christmas Day as described by Samuel Pepys, Anthony Trollope, George Eliot, or Nancy Mitford. Venture out into the snow in the company of Jane Austen, Henry James, and Dickens's Mr. Pickwick. Entertain the children with the seasonal tales of Dylan Thomas, Kenneth Grahame, and Oscar Wilde.




How to Keep Christmas Well


Book Description

A FRESH LOOK ATA TIMELESS CLASSIC A redeeming mixture of old and new, How to Keep Christmas Well refreshes the oft trodden path of Scrooge from miser to mercy by gifting the reader a peek under Dickens' renowned wrapping. Weighed down by the hustle and bustle of the modern Christmas season, it has become harder than ever to keep Christmas well. This, added to the tattering repetition of an old tale of redemption, has caused the jovial flavor of A Christmas Carol to lose its haunting spark. Catchings' reflections and poetry dust off the original 1843 text and present it, with revived ghostliness, to the modern reader. Page by page, the reader is drawn back into the slippers of Scrooge so that they can, again for the first time, learn How to Keep Christmas Well.




Christmas at Dingley Dell


Book Description

This is a new release of the original 1926 edition.




Christmas Classics: Charles Dickens Collection (With Original Illustrations)


Book Description

This unique collection of "Christmas Classics: Charles Dickens Collection (With Original Illustrations)” has been designed and formatted to the highest digital standards. A Christmas Carol The Chimes Oliver Twist A Christmas Tree David Copperfield Little Dorrit The Cricket on the Hearth The Battle of Life The Haunted Man What Christmas Is As We Grow Older The Poor Relation's Story The Child's Story The Schoolboy's Story Nobody's Story The Seven Poor Travellers The Holly-Tree The Wreck of the Golden Mary The Perils of Certain English Prisoners A House to Let The Haunted House A Message From the Sea Tom Tiddler's Ground Somebody's Luggage Mrs. Lirriper's Lodgings Mrs. Lirriper's Legacy Doctor Marigold's Prescriptions Mugby Junction No Thoroughfare Great Expectations The Pickwick Papers