
a book
The Pickwick Papers
Charles Dickens · 2000 · 1006 pages
The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club (also known as The Pickwick Papers) was Charles Dickens's first novel. He was asked to contribute to the project as an up-and-coming writer following the success of Sketches by Boz, published in 1836 (most of Dickens' novels were issued in shilling instalments before being published as complete volumes). Dickens (still writing under the pseudonym of Boz) increasingly took over the unsuccessful monthly publication after the original illustrator Robert Seymour had committed suicide.
recommended by 3 people
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Hugh Dancy
“When I need to read something that I know will fill my imagination, lift my spirits and also be effortless, I go to Dickens, and this is the most preposterously, comically overflowing of them all.”↗

Upulie Divisekera
“Pickwick Papers is my new favourite book. I’m crying with laughter which is awkward because I’m sitting in a cafe”↗
