Dickens and Travel: The Origins of Modern Travel Writing - Explore Literary Journeys & Victorian Adventures
Dickens and Travel: The Origins of Modern Travel Writing - Explore Literary Journeys & Victorian Adventures

Dickens and Travel: The Origins of Modern Travel Writing - Explore Literary Journeys & Victorian Adventures" (如果原标题是中文,优化后的英文标题为:) "Dickens and Travel: The Beginnings of Modern Travel Literature - Perfect for Book Lovers & History Enthusiasts

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Description

Charles Dickens's global travels across Europe, America, and Canada influenced his literary works.From childhood, Charles Dickens was fascinated by tales from other countries and other cultures, and he longed to see the world. In Dickens and Travel, Lucinda Hawksley looks at the journeys made by the author – who is also her great great great grandfather.Although Dickens is usually perceived as a London author, in the 1840s he whisked his family away to live in Italy for year, and spent several months in Switzerland. Some years later he took up residence in Paris and Boulogne (where he lived in secret with his lover). In addition to traveling widely in Europe, he also toured America twice, performed onstage in Canada and, before his untimely death, was planning a tour of Australia.Dickens and Travel enters into the world of the Victorian traveler and looks at how Charles Dickens’s journeys influenced his writing and enriched his life.

Reviews

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One of the many things I learned in the superb “Charles Dickens & Travel: the Start of Modern Travel Writing” by the prolific and versatile author Lucinda Hawksley, is that “The Sparkler of Albion” was a nickname by which Dickens was known among his friends. His great-great-great granddaughter, Lucinda Hawksley, should henceforth be known as “The London Sparkle” having put a wise, witty and wonderfully detailed sheen not only on her ancestor’s history but on making a solid and page-turning treatise that her forebear invented modern “travel writing.”Reading this delightful biography while aboard ship was an especial treat for me as I dove bow first into Dickens’ trips to the United States (ante bellum and post civil war) and how Dickens was the first truly international celebrity to go on tour. Without Dickens and his tale of two continents there would never have been Jenny Lind in New York or Oscar Wilde in San Francisco decades later.Dickens’ sojourns in his native United Kingdom, Ireland, Italy, France, Switzerland, Canada and a planned but unrealized trip to Australia round out Lucinda’s lucid and fact-filled journey. I loved every page, especially learning many things I should have known but did not. How can anyone write in the English language without knowing Dickens more fully? I’m happy to have been sent back to school by Lucinda.The apples have fallen close to the Dickens family tree for now close on 200 years. Lucinda, a gifted and crowd pleasing lecturer in addition to being an author and biographer of other subjects, is continuing a liberal, literary legacy: Charles was only the most famous Dickens to write. Lucinda is more than equal to her lineage and a proudly progressive voice upon which the “Sparkler of Albion” would undoubtedly smile.If you love travel, Dickens, history or just plain fantastic, impeccably well researched eloquent writing, this is a book for you, and Lucinda Hawksley an author whose pages you should bookmark and turn.— David Eugene Perry, author of “Upon This Rock”