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Dickens' Fur Coat and Charlotte's Unanswered Letters: The Rows and Romances of England's Great Victorian Novelists by Daniel Pool
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Dickens' Fur Coat and Charlotte's Unanswered Letters: The Rows and…

by Daniel Pool

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Children, Charlotte has been writing a book--and I think it is a better one than I expected.
-- The Reverend Patrick Bronte, upon joining his daughters Emily and Anne for tea after first reading Jane Eyre.
Do not speak slightingly of the three-volume novel, Cecily.
--The Importance of Being Earnest
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Amazon.com (ISBN 0060183659, Paperback)

With publishing empires swallowing smaller house for breakfast and agents swiping authors left, right, and center, the modern book industry might seem an insider's paradise, an aspiring author's nightmare, a reader's Goldberg contraption. Alas, according to Daniel Pool, 'twas ever thus. Money, advertising, publicity, blurbs, and the author's charisma were just as central to Victorian bookselling as they are now. Focusing particularly on Dickens, Charlotte Brontë, George Eliot, and Thackeray, the author builds up a portrait of cutthroat times and cutthroat measures. Readers will be particularly taken with the author's account of the rise of the serial novel--and Dickens's frustration with the form. (Something Flaubert quickly copped to. After finishing The Pickwick Papers, he commented to George Sand, "Some bits are magnificent, but what a defective structure.") And the quotations Daniel Pool presents, from the epigraphs to Virginia Woolf's assessment on the final page, make Dickens' Fur Coat essential social history.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:58 -0400)

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