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NEW Dickensalong - Martin Chuzzlewit 2024-2025

203 replies

Piggywaspushed · 20/07/2024 11:29

Come along and join me in the next Dickens readalong.

We have chosen Martin Chuzzlewit which was originally published by Dickens in 19 instalments, all exactly 32 pages long!

I propose condensing this to an eight month read, using Dickens' shorter sections as a guide (this is one fewer than NN). We begin in August, as follows:

August - Chapters 1 - 8
September - Chapters 9-15
October - Chapters 16-23
November - Chapters 24-29
December - Chapters 30-35
January 2025 - Chapters 36-41
February - Chapters 42-47
and finishing in
March 2025 - Chapters 48 - end

This on its publication history is interesting:

The early monthly numbers were not as successful as Dickens's previous work and sold about 20,000 copies each, as compared to 40,000 to 50,000 for the monthly numbers of the Pickwick Papers and Nicholas Nickleby, and 60,000 to 70,000 for the weekly issues of The Old Curiosity Shop. The lack of success of the novel caused a rift between Dickens and his publishers when they invoked a penalty clause in his contract requiring him to pay back money they had lent him to cover their costs.
Dickens responded to the disappointing early sales of the monthly parts compared to sales of previous works as monthly instalments; he changed the plot to send the title character to the United States. This allowed the author to portray the United States, which he had visited in 1842, satirically, as a near-wilderness with pockets of civilisation filled with deceitful and self-promoting hucksters.
Dickens's satire of American modes and manners in the novel won him no friends on the other side of the Atlantic, where the instalments containing the offending chapters were greeted with a "frenzy of wrath". As a consequence Dickens received abusive mail and newspaper clippings from the United States

Summoning old faithfuls and newcomers, one and all!

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Piggywaspushed · 17/04/2025 06:41

Great summaries and thoughts cassandre. I noticed, but forgot to comment upon, the change of register at the denouement. Mostly, I noticed the righteous Biblical language of MC Senior (not to be confused with Hammer, obviously...) who suddenly starting loing and yeing and bringing wrath on heads. It was all very melodramatic.

There was a previous novel where a character slipped into this kind of hellfire vernacular but I can't remember which - Little Dorritt seems most likely. Occasionally Dickens himself does it to- in a kind of preacherly voice.

I'm not sure that the man angle is as rare as all that : Smike springs to mind and also the old boy in TOCS. My memory is awful but the one in the church at the end? Doesn't he literally die on a grave? Or is that in Little Dorritt? Honestly, all these Dickens I have read and I can't remember one form the other!

Now you come to mention it, nothing does come of Tom Pinch's musical gift! I always think it seems unlikely that he is an organ virtuouso.

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cassandre · 17/04/2025 21:27

Thanks @Piggywaspushed ! Interesting point about the 'hellfire vernacular' (great term).

And interesting too to hear that the 'angel man' trope isn't so rare in Dickens. You would know better than I would since I've only read a few Dickens novels as an adult (and the ones I read when I was young I recollect only very hazily).

Going over to the Dombey thread now.

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