Sketches by Boz

Sketches by Boz by Charles Dickens is a collection that showcases the author’s early literary voice, published by Penguin Publishing Group on May 1, 1996. This edition spans 688 pages and presents a rich tapestry of observations and fictional narratives that capture the essence of London in the 1830s. Through vivid descriptions of the city’s streets, theatres, and various social settings, Dickens offers insights into the lives of its inhabitants, from the downtrodden to the more affluent.
Readers will find a blend of humor and pathos in these sketches, which often foreshadow characters from Dickens’s later works. The collection includes portrayals of diverse figures such as condemned prisoners and garrulous matrons, reflecting the author’s keen social critique. This edition also features original illustrations by George Cruickshank, along with supplementary materials like a chronology and notes that enhance the reading experience. Sketches by Boz serves as an important precursor to Dickens’s subsequent masterpieces, providing a glimpse into his evolving narrative style and thematic concerns.
Official synopsis Publisher
Charles Dickens’s first book, complete with all the pathos and comic invention of his later masterpieces
Published under the pen-name ‘Boz’, Charles Dickens’s first book Sketches by Boz (1836) heralded an exciting new voice in English literature. This richly varied collection of observation, fancy and fiction shows the London he knew so intimately at its best and worst – its streets, theatres, inns, pawnshops, law courts, prisons, omnibuses and the river Thames – in honest and visionary descriptions of everyday life and people. Through pen portraits that often anticipate characters from his great novels, we see the condemned man in his prison cell, garrulous matrons, vulgar young clerks and Scrooge-like bachelors, while Dickens’s powers for social critique are never far from the surface, in unflinching depictions of the vast metropolis’s forgotten citizens, from child workers to prostitutes. A startling mixture of humour and pathos, these Sketches reveal London as wonderful terrain for an extraordinary young writer. In his introduction, Dennis Walder discusses Dickens’s social commentary, his view of London and his imaginative mixing of genres, and places the Sketches in the tradition of eighteenth and nineteenth-century reportage. This edition also includes the original illustrations by George Cruickshank, a chronology, further reading, appendices and notes.
For more than seventy years, Penguin has been the leading publisher of classic literature in the English-speaking world. With more than 1,700 titles, Penguin Classics represents a global bookshelf of the best works throughout history and across genres and disciplines. Readers trust the series to provide authoritative texts enhanced by introductions and notes by distinguished scholars and contemporary authors, as well as up-to-date translations by award-winning translators.
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