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Charles Dickens bibliography


Charles Dickens bibliography


The bibliography of Charles Dickens (1812–1870) includes more than a dozen major novels, many short stories (including Christmas-themed stories and ghost stories), several plays, several non-fiction books, and individual essays and articles. Dickens's novels were serialized initially in weekly or monthly magazines, then reprinted in standard book formats.

Novels and novellas

Short stories

Stories from collaborative works

Short story collections

  • Sketches by Boz (1836)
  • The Mudfog Papers (1837–38)
  • Sketches of Young Gentlemen (1838)
  • Sketches of Young Couples (1840)
  • Master Humphrey's Clock (1840–41)
  • The Poor Traveller, Boots at the Holly-Tree Inn and Mrs. Gamp (1858)
  • Reprinted Pieces (1861)
  • Three Ghost Stories (1866)
  • Christmas Stories (1868)
  • The Lamplighter, To Be Read at Dusk and Sunday Under Three Heads (1868)

Collaborative works

During his tenure as editor of Household Words and All the Year Round, Dickens would collaborate with other staff writers, usually in seasonal issues of the magazines, producing the following works:

  • Published in Household Words:
    • "A Round of Stories by the Christmas Fire" (1852) (with William Moy Thomas, Elizabeth Gaskell, Edmund Ollier, James White, Edmund Saul Dixon, Harriet Martineau, Samuel Sidney and Eliza Griffiths)
    • "Another Round of Stories by the Christmas Fire" (1853) (with Eliza Linton, George Sala, Adelaide Procter, Elizabeth Gaskell, Edmund Saul Dixon, William Henry Wills and Samuel Sidney)
    • "The Seven Poor Travellers" (1854) (with Wilkie Collins, Adelaide Procter, George Sala and Eliza Linton – about the Six Poor Travellers House)
    • "The Holly-tree Inn" (1855) (with Wilkie Collins, William Howitt, Harriet Parr and Adelaide Procter)
    • "The Wreck of the Golden Mary" (1856) (with Wilkie Collins, Adelaide Procter, Harriet Parr, Percy Fitzgerald and James White)
    • "The Lazy Tour of Two Idle Apprentices" (1857) (with Wilkie Collins)
    • "The Perils of Certain English Prisoners" (1857) (with Wilkie Collins)
    • "A House to Let" (1858) (with Wilkie Collins, Elizabeth Gaskell and Adelaide Procter)
  • Published in All the Year Round:
    • "The Haunted House" (1859) (with Wilkie Collins, Elizabeth Gaskell, Adelaide Procter, George Sala and Hesba Stretton)
    • "A Message from the Sea" (1860) (with Wilkie Collins, Robert Buchanan, Charles Allston Collins, Amelia Edwards and Harriet Parr)
    • "Tom Tiddler's Ground" (1861) (with Wilkie Collins, Charles Allston Collins, Amelia Edwards and John Harwood)
    • "Somebody's Luggage" (1862) (with John Oxenford, Charles Allston Collins, Arthur Locker and Julia Cecilia Stretton)
    • "Mrs. Lirriper's Lodgings" (1863) (with Elizabeth Gaskell, Andrew Halliday, Edmund Yates, Amelia Edwards and Charles Allston Collins)
    • "Mrs. Lirriper's Legacy" (1864) (with Charles Allston Collins, Amelia Edwards, Rosa Mulholland, Henry Spicer and Hesba Stretton)
    • "Doctor Marigold’s Prescriptions" (1865) (with Charles Allston Collins, Hesba Stretton, George Walter Thornbury and Caroline Leigh Gascoigne)
    • "Mugby Junction" (1866) (with Andrew Halliday, Hesba Stretton, Charles Allston Collins and Amelia Edwards)
    • "No Thoroughfare" (1867) (with Wilkie Collins)

Poetry

  • Songs from The Village Coquettes (1836)
  • "The Ivy Green", "A Christmas Carol", "Gabriel Grub's Song" and "The Romance of Dick Turpin" (from The Pickwick Papers) (1837)
  • "Duet" (from The Lamplighter) (1838)
  • "The Loving Ballad of Lord Bateman" (1839)
  • Three Political Squibs from the Examiner ("The Fine Old English Gentleman", "The Quack Doctor's Proclamation" and "Subjects for Painters") (1841)
  • "Prologue" (from John Westland Marston's play The Patrician's Daughter (1842)
  • "A Word in Season" (1844)
  • "All Hail to the Vessel of Pecksniff the Sire" and "It May Lighten and Storm" (from Martin Chuzzlewit) (1844)
  • Verses from the Daily News ("The British Lion" and "The Hymn of the Wiltshire Labourers") (1846)
  • "New Song" (to Mark Lemon) (1849)
  • "Prologue" and "The Song of the Wreck" (from Wilkie Collins' play The Lighthouse) (1855)
  • "A Child’s Hymn" (from The Wreck of the Golden Mary) (1856)
  • "Prologue" (from Dickens and Collins' play The Frozen Deep) (1857)
  • The Complete Poems of Charles Dickens (collection, 1885)

Plays

  • The Strange Gentleman (comic opera, 1836)
  • The Village Coquettes (comic opera, 1836)
  • Is She His Wife? (comic opera, 1837)
  • The Lamplighter (farce, 1838)
  • Mr. Nightingale's Diary (farce, 1851) (with Mark Lemon)
  • The Frozen Deep (1857) (with Wilkie Collins)
  • No Thoroughfare (1867) (with Wilkie Collins)
Collection James Bond 007

Nonfiction

  • Sunday Under Three Heads (1836) (under the pseudonym "Timothy Sparks")
  • Memoirs of Joseph Grimaldi (1838) (edited by Dickens under his regular nom de plume, "Boz")
  • American Notes for General Circulation (1842)
  • Pictures from Italy (1846)
  • The Life of Our Lord (1846–1849, pub. 1934)
  • A Child's History of England (1853)
  • The Uncommercial Traveller (1860–1869)
  • Speeches, Letters and Sayings (1870)
  • Miscellaneous Papers (1912)
  • Contributions to All The Year Round (1912)
  • Letters of Charles Dickens to Wilkie Collins (1851–1870, pub. 1892) (selected by Georgina Hogarth)

Letters

Editing and publication of the reference edition of Dickens's letters started in 1949 when publisher Rupert Hart-Davis persuaded Humphry House of Wadham College, Oxford, to edit a complete edition of the letters. House died suddenly aged 46 in 1955. However, the work continued, and by 2002 Volume 12 had been published. The letters are collected chronologically; thus volume 1 covers the years 1820–1839; volume 2, 1840–1841; volume 3, 1842–1843; volume 4, 1844–1846; volume 5, 1847–1849; volume 6, 1850–1852; volume 7, 1853–1855; volume 8, 1856–1858; volume 9, 1859–1861; volume 10, 1862–1864; volume 11, 1865–1867; and volume 12, 1868–1870.

Articles and essays

Notes

External links

  • Charles Dickens' works to read online at Bookwise
  • Works by Charles Dickens at Project Gutenberg, HTML and plain text versions.
  • Works by Charles Dickens at Faded Page (Canada)
  • Works by or about Charles Dickens at Internet Archive

Text submitted to CC-BY-SA license. Source: Charles Dickens bibliography by Wikipedia (Historical)



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