Oliver Twist

Couverture
Random House Publishing Group, 1 mai 1982 - 480 pages
This fiercely comic tale stands in marked  contrast to its genial predecessor, The Pickwick  Papers. Set against London's seedy back  street slums, Oliver Twist is  the saga of a workhouse orphan captured and thrust  into a thieves' den, where some of Dickens's most  depraved villains preside: the incorrigible  Artful Dodger, the murderous bully Sikes, and the  terrible Fagin, that treacherous ringleader whose  grinning knavery threatens to send them all to the  "ghostly gallows." Yet at the heart of this  drama is the orphan Oliver, whose unsullied  goodness leads him at last to salvation. In 1838 the  publication of Oliver Twist firmly established the  literary eminence of young Dickens. It was,  according to Edgar Johnson, "a clarion peal  announcing to the world that in Charles Dickens the  rejected and forgotten and misused of the world had a  champion."
 

Table des matières

CHAPTER I
1
CHAPTER III
14
CHAPTER IV
23
CHAPTER V
30
CHAPTER VI
41
Oliver walks to London He encounters on the road
53
CHAPTER IX
62
CHAPTER X
68
CHAPTER XXVII
207
CHAPTER XXIX
224
CHAPTER XXXI
235
CHAPTER XXXII
246
CHAPTER XXXIII
255
Contains some introductory particulars relative
264
CHAPTER XXXV
274
CHAPTER XXXVI
282

CHAPTER XII
81
CHAPTER XIII
91
CHAPTER XIV
99
CHAPTER XV
110
CHAPTER XVI
116
Olivers destiny continuing unpropitious brings
126
CHAPTER XVIII
136
CHAPTER XIX
144
CHAPTER XX
154
CHAPTER XXI
162
CHAPTER XXII
168
CHAPTER XXIII
175
CHAPTER XXIV
183
CHAPTER XXVI
195
CHAPTER XXXIX
306
CHAPTER XL
320
CHAPTER XLI
327
CHAPTER XLII
337
CHAPTER XLIII
348
CHAPTER XLIV
358
CHAPTER XLV
365
CHAPTER XLVII
379
CHAPTER XLVIII
386
CHAPTER XLIX
395
CHAPTER LI
416
CHAPTER LII
429
Bibliography
443
Droits d'auteur

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À propos de l'auteur (1982)

Charles Dickens (1812-1870) was born in Portsmouth, England, and spent most of his life in London. When he was twelve, his father was sent to debtor’s prison and he was forced to work in a boot polish factory, an experience that marked him for life. He became a passionate advocate of social reform and the most popular writer of the Victorian era.

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