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Our Mutual Friend

Front Cover
31 Reviews
Penguin Books Limited, 1865 - Fiction - 884 pages

'Has a dead man any use for money? … What world does money belong to? This world. How can money be a corpse's?'

Our Mutual Friend centres on an inheritance – Old Harmon's profitable dust heaps – and its legatees, young John Harmon, presumed drowned when a body is pulled out of the River Thames, and kindly dustman Mr Boffin, to whom the fortune defaults. With brilliant satire, Dickens portrays a dark, macabre London, inhabited by such disparate characters as Gaffer Hexam, scavenging the river for corpses; enchanting, mercenary Bella Wilfer; the social climbing Veneerings; and the unscrupulous street-trader Silas Wegg. Dickens's last completed novel is richly symbolic in its vision of death and renewal in a city dominated by the fetid Thames, and of the corrupting power of money.

This edition uses the text of the first volume edition of 1865, and includes the original illustrations, a chronology, a list for further reading, and appendices on the illustrations and serial plans. Adrian Poole's introduction examines biblical allusions and the central themes of Our Mutual Friend.

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Review: Our Mutual Friend

User Review  - Derek Ganzhorn - Goodreads

Our Mutual Friend is the novel I would recommend to Dickens-haters, or at least to those who are unsure as to how they feel about him. This is Dickens's darkest and most cynical book. It is also one ... Read full review

Review: Our Mutual Friend

User Review  - Franziska - Goodreads

Where does one start with Our Mutual Friend? To write a complete review, it would be necessary to write an essay, which, in fact, I did do for an English assignment during my last year of school. But ... Read full review

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About the author (1865)

Charles Dickens was born on February 7, 1812, in Landport, Portsea, England. He died in Kent on June 9, 1870. The second of eight children of a family continually plagued by debt, the young Dickens came to know not only hunger and privation,but also the horror of the infamous debtors' prison and the evils of child labor. A turn of fortune in the shape of a legacy brought release from the nightmare of prison and “slave” factories and afforded Dickens the opportunity of two years' formal schooling at Wellington House Academy. He worked as an attorney's clerk and newspaper reporter until his Sketches by Boz (1836) and The Pickwick Papers (1837) brought him the amazing and instant success that was to be his for the remainder of his life. In later years, the pressure of serial writing, editorial duties, lectures, and social commitments led to his separation from Catherine Hogarth after twenty-three years of marriage. It also hastened his death at the age of fifty-eight, when he was characteristically engaged in a multitude of work.

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