Contributions

  • Cardwell, Margaret. - Contributor

Publication

2009 - Oxford University Press, Oxford, England

Language

English

Word Count

184,000 words, Guess

Page Count

736 pages

Identifiers

  • ISBN-139780199554003
  • ISBN-100199554005
  • Goodreads6339177
  • LibraryThing15539
  • Library of Congress Control Number2009291580
and 3 more

Classifications

  • DDC823/.8
  • LCCPR4563.A2 C37 2009

Description

The greed of his family has led wealthy old Martin Chuzzlewit to become suspicious and misanthropic, leaving his grandson and namesake to make his own way in the world. And so young Martin sets out from the Wiltshire home of his supposed champion, the scheming architect Pecksniff, to seek his fortune in America. In depicting Martin's journey – an experience that teaches him to question his inherited self-interest and egotism – Dickens created many vividly realized figures: the brutish lout Jonas Chuzzlewit, plotting to gain the family fortune; Martin's optimistic manservant, Mark Tapley; gentle Tom Pinch; and the drunken and corrupt private nurse, Mrs Gamp. With its portrayal of greed, blackmail and murder, and its searing satire on America Dickens's novel is a powerful and blackly comic story of hypocrisy and redemption.

Description

At the center of Martin Chuzzlewit is Martin himself, very old, very rich, very much on his guard. What he suspects (with good reason) is that every one of his close and distant relations, now converging in droves on the country inn where they believe he is dying, will stop at nothing to become the inheritor of his great fortune. Having unjustly disinherited his grandson, young Martin, the old fellow now trusts no one but Mary Graham, the pretty girl hired as his companion. Though she has been made to understand she will not inherit a penny, she remains old Chuzzlewit's only ally. As the viperish relations and hangers-on close in on him, we meet some of Dickens's most marvelous characters - among them Mr. Pecksniff (whose name has entered the language as a synonym for ultimate hypocrisy and self-importance): the fabulously evil Jonas Chuzzlewit: the strutting reptile Tigg Montague: and the ridiculous, terrible, comical Sairey Gamp.

Subjects

Genres

  • Fiction

Series Statement

  • Oxford world's classics
  • Oxford world's classics (Oxford University Press)

Other Editions

  • Martin ChuzzlewitOxford University Press2009-01-01
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