Best of
British-Literature
1848
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
Anne Brontë - 1848
Actual opening line of the novel is: "To J. Halford, Esq. Dear Halford, when we were together last..."This is the story of a woman's struggle for independence. Helen "Graham" has returned to Wildfell Hall in flight from a disastrous marriage. Exiled to the desolate moorland mansion, she adopts an assumed name and earns her living as a painter.
Dombey and Son
Charles Dickens - 1848
As Jonathan Lethem contends in his Introduction, Dickens’s “genius . . . is at one with the genius of the form of the novel itself: Dickens willed into existence the most capacious and elastic and versatile kind of novel that could be, one big enough for his vast sentimental yearnings and for every impulse and fear and hesitation in him that countervailed those yearnings too. Never parsimonious and frequently contradictory, he always gives us everything he can, everything he’s planned to give, and then more.” This Modern Library Paperback Classic was set from the 1867 “Charles Dickens” edition.
Christmas Books: A Christmas Carol, The Chimes, The Cricket on the Hearth, The Battle of Life, The Haunted Man and the Ghost's Bargain
Charles Dickens - 1848
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall and Agnes Grey
Anne Brontë - 1848
The love story of Agnes Grey, gentle, though it has a significant shadow behind it
Dombey and Son, V2/2
Charles Dickens - 1848
This volume is produced from digital images created through the University of Michigan University Library's preservation reformatting program.
