Dickens Novels as Verse adds to Dickens criticism by being unlike most Dickens criticism. It argues that some of the great Dickens novels (A Tale of Two Cities, Our Mutual Friend and Great Expectations) are held together by book-length patterns in...
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Dickens Novels as Verse adds to Dickens criticism by being unlike most Dickens criticism. It argues that some of the great Dickens novels (A Tale of Two Cities, Our Mutual Friend and Great Expectations) are held together by book-length patterns in topics that, like alliteration in lyric verse, are non-signifying and do not reward interpretation, but that, by organizing the
Contents; Acknowledgments; Note on Editions, Citation, and Typography; Introduction; CHAPTER ONE. A Tale of Two Cities; CHAPTER TWO. Our Mutual Friend; CHAPTER THREE. Great Expectations; Appendix-Echoes Between the Final Paragraphs of Chapters 1-7 of Great Expectations; Selected Bibliography; Index; About the Author