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Charles Dickens: A Life

Claire Tomalin

Plot Summary

Charles Dickens: A Life

Claire Tomalin

Nonfiction | Biography | Adult | Published in 2011

Plot Summary
Charles Dickens: A Life is a 2011 biography of the nineteenth-century author by Claire Tomalin. Tomalin, an acclaimed British journalist and biographer, has also written biographies of Thomas Hardy, Mary Wollstonecraft, and Jane Austen. Charles Dickens: A Life was shortlisted for the Costa Book Awards, Biography category in 2011.

One of the main themes of the biography is the money issues that Dickens faces throughout his life. At the age of twelve, he is forced to leave school to begin work in a blacking factory after his father is imprisoned in debtor’s prison. Dickens boards with a family friend Elizabeth Roylance while his mother and siblings join his father in the prison. Elizabeth becomes the inspiration for the character Mrs. Pipchin in his early novel Dombey and Son. Later, he lives with Archibald Russell and his family, who become the inspiration for the Garlands in The Old Curiosity Shop.

Working ten hours a day in the blacking factory leaves an impression on young Dickens, shaping him into the social reformer he becomes in his later years. After his father receives an inheritance that allows him some financial security, Dickens receives about two more years of schooling before leaving permanently to become a clerk in a law office. In 1828, he leaves the law business to become a freelance reporter specializing in legal matters.



Throughout his early twenties, Dickens tries several different careers, including acting, but ultimately settles on writing fiction. He submits his first short story to a magazine in 1833 and continues to work as a political journalist while developing his writing career. In 1835, he makes the acquaintance of the editor of the Morning Chronicle, George Hogarth, and begins courting his daughter Catherine. He soon releases his first novel, The Pickwick Papers, which sells almost 40,000 copies, making it a resounding success.

This begins a period of intense productivity for Dickens. He begins writing Oliver Twist while simultaneously working on four plays and serving as editor of Bentley’s Miscellany. In 1836, he marries Catherine and in 1837, she has the first of their ten children. This period of prosperity is very different from his childhood poverty. However, Dickens also begins to show signs of mental instability, openly flirting with other women and acting erratically.

In 1842, Dickens and Catherine arrive in the United States for the first time. While traveling around the country, Dickens gathers material for a travelogue called American Notes for General Circulation. He also gives a series of lectures in New York on the subject of international copyright law which relates to the pirating of his work in America. Though he recruits a number of influential American writers to his cause, the public is generally hostile to him on the issue.



After he returns to England a year later, Dickens completes several of his most well-known novels, including A Christmas Carol and David Copperfield, the latter of which marks a turn towards more serious themes in Dickens’s work. He continued to write novels on social and political matters, including A Tale of Two Cities and Bleak House.

In 1857, Dickens and Catherine separate, which is highly unusual at the time. Catherine takes their youngest child with her, and Dickens begins an affair with Ellen Ternan, a much younger actress whom he has hired for one of his plays. The extent of the affair remains unknown since Dickens and Ellen destroy most of their letters from the time. However, they frequently travel together, including a journey to Paris in 1865. On the way home from this trip, Dickens is involved in the Staplehurst rail crash, a train disaster in which several first-class carriages of a passenger train derail and crash into the water. Unhurt by the crash, Dickens tends to the wounded before help arrives. He does not appear at the inquest into the crash in order to conceal the fact that he had been traveling with Ellen.

After planning a second trip to the United States for more than six years, Dickens makes the journey in 1867. He completes a grueling lecture tour and returns to Europe feeling exhausted. However, he still plans a series of farewell readings in England and Scotland. By the end of the tour, Dickens is suffering from fits of paralysis and weakness. In 1869, he suffers a stroke that ends his career as a lecturer. However, he continues to work on his final novel, The Mystery of Edwin Drood.



In 1870, he suffers a second stroke that eventually kills him. Although, officially, Dickens died at home without regaining consciousness, Tomalin suspects and makes a case that he might have actually been at Ellen’s house and that Ellen smuggled him home to prevent their affair from becoming public.

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