Dickens Novels as Verse

Joseph P Jordan author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Associated University Presses

Published:19th May '14

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Dickens Novels as Verse cover

As its startling and aggressive title suggests, Dickens Novels as Verse is no standard work of literary criticism. It is, in fact, altogether new and original. Jordan likens the experience of some of the great Dickens novels, particularly the later ones (namely, A Tale of Two Cities, Great Expectations and Our Mutual Friend) to the experience of lyric verse. The point is not that Dickens novels could ever be mistaken for lyric poems, but that the experience of some of the best of Dickens’s novels, despite their undoubted sprawl, is like the experience of lyric poems—is so because the novels are made up of the same things that make great verse great: intricate, largely unnoticeable tissues of alliteration-like patterning that net across the work and give narratively insignificant coherence to it. Dickens Novels as Verse meticulously describes these book-length patterns in clear, lucid prose. Its three chapters, each focused on a single Dickens novel, are full of close analyses that can be immediately used by teachers, students, and all other readers of Dickens to grasp why Dickens always seems to be a greater writer than the quality of his ideas might lead us to expect.

Joseph Jordan has given us a reading of the almost invisible patterning of syntax and syntactical echoes deep in the texture of Dickens's writing that is so fresh and persuasive, it tells us something genuinely new about novels. -- Robert Hass, former US Poet Laureate and principal translator of Czeslaw Milosz’s poetry into English

ISBN: 9781611477283

Dimensions: 228mm x 156mm x 13mm

Weight: 245g

158 pages