Hard Times.

By Charles Dickens

Printed: 1971

Publisher: Collins. London

Edition: Reprint

Dimensions 12 × 19 × 2 cm
Language

Language: English

Size (cminches): 12 x 19 x 2

£19.00
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Item information

Description

Navy leatherette binding with gilt title and decoration on the spine.

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A magnificent copy

Hard Times: For These Times (commonly known as Hard Times) is the tenth novel by Charles Dickens, first published in 1854. The book surveys English society and satirizes the social and economic conditions of the era.

Hard Times is unusual in several ways. It is by far the shortest of Dickens’s novels, barely a quarter of the length of those written immediately before and after it.  Also, unlike all but one of his other novels, Hard Times has neither a preface nor illustrations. Moreover, it is his only novel not to have scenes set in London. Instead, the story is set in the fictitious Victorian industrial Coketown, a generic Northern English mill-town, in some ways like Manchester, though smaller. Coketown may be partially based on 19th-century Preston.

One of Dickens’s reasons for writing Hard Times was that sales of his weekly periodical Household Words were low, and it was hoped the novel’s publication in instalments would boost circulation – as indeed proved to be the case. Since publication it has received a mixed response from critics. Critics such as George Bernard Shaw and Thomas Macaulay have mainly focused on Dickens’s treatment of trade unions and his post–Industrial Revolution pessimism regarding the divide between capitalist mill owners and undervalued workers during the Victorian era. F. R. Leavis, a great admirer of the book, included it – but not Dickens’s work as a whole – as part of his Great Tradition of English novels.

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