This graphic biography for middle grade heartens with the story of Charles Dickens – one of the greatest writers of all time who wrote Great Expectations, A Tale of Two Cities and Oliver Twist among many other famous stories.
Charles Dickens (1812-1870) was
born in Portsmouth, England during the age of war and Industrial Revolution. He
witnessed the poverty and abuse and sympathized with those less fortunate.
His father was the wages clerk for
the Royal Navy, and his job moved him and his family from place to place. He
inherited his comic voice from his mother, which he used with his talent for
story telling from early age. He entertained grow-ups at local inns.
For a while, the family lived close
to a small theatre where songs came through the thin walls and the whole family
would often join in dancing. When the family moved to London and his father no
longer could afford to pay for his education, Charles stayed home, reading
books, including Robinson Crusoe.
In 1823, at eleven, Charles got
lost in the bustling streets of London which were filled with pickpockets,
rogues and other characters which later appeared in his stories.
Theatres were the cheap
entertainment of the day. Charles had his own toy theatre. From early age, he
wrote and acted in some of his own plays.
His father had no sense of managing
money. Thus, leaving family in much debt. Charles was forced by his parents to
work at factory at twelve.
His father was sent to debtor’s prison.
After he paid his debt thanks to his small inheritance from his mother, Charles
was sent back to school. But it was his father’s decision. His mother wanted
him to stay and work at factory. Charles felt bitter about this throughout his
life.
When his father’s money troubles
continued, Charles left school for good in 1827 and became a lawyer’s office
boy. In his spare time, with a fellow clerk, they performed at a local theatre.
At sixteen, in 1828, he got a
position as a newspaper reporter. He also began to write short stories which
began to be published regularly. He became friend of editor whose daughter
enchanted Charles, and they got married in 1836.
At twenty-five, Charles wrote a
news series for a magazine. He immersed himself into creating characters by
mimicking them. He looked in the mirror and made facial contortions or talked
rapidly in a low voice.
In 1838, he visited the infamous
Yorkshire schools to which unwanted boys were sent and treated badly. This led
him to writing Nicholas Nickleby.
In 1842, he visited the US and was
treated like a superstar followed by a multitude.
In 1843, A Christmas Carol became
favorite Christmas fairy tale.
In 1850, he wandered for miles at night,
revisiting some old sites, including the factory and the place nearby where he
stayed. This place continued to haunt him even when he was happy. This led him
to write David Copperfield.
In 1851, his fascination for
detectives inspired him to invent one of the first fictional police detectives.
In 1865, he narrowly escaped death
while travelling by steam train. Only five years later, at fifty-eight, worn
out by his hectic life-style and before completing The Mystery of Edwin Drood,
Dickens dies.
This is a graphic novel for ages
8-12. Thus, illustrations are big part of this storytelling, and both are
beautiful and touching. Presented with fairly simple sentences, this story can
be read by the target audience. Some painful memories that stayed with Dickens
are well-dramatized so it touches human emotions. And it’s well-presented how
Dickens used his painful experiences and observations as tool in his
storytelling which touched multitude of people.
Source: Frances Lincoln Children’s
Books, 2011
TRENDING INSPIRATION: Dickens used
his painful experiences and observations as tool in his storytelling which
touched multitude of people.
Traits:
·
He grew up during the
time of wars and Industrial Revolution. He witnessed the poverty and abuse and
sympathized with those less fortunate. Those observations influenced his writing.
·
He used his comic voice
with his talent for story telling from early age.
·
When his father no
longer could afford to pay for his education, Charles stayed home, reading
books.
·
When he got lost in the
bustling streets of London which were filled with pickpockets, rogues and other
characters, what he observed later appeared in his stories.
·
From early age, he
wrote and acted in some of his own plays.
·
In his spare time, with
a fellow clerk, they performed at a local theatre.
·
While working as a
newspaper reporter, in his spare time, he started to write short stories which
began to be published regularly.
·
When he wrote a news
series for a magazine, he also immersed himself into creating characters by
mimicking them.
·
His fascination for
detectives inspired him to invent one of the first fictional police detectives.
·
Throughout his life, he
found jobs that kept him close to what he loved to do and meanwhile was writing
what was close to his heart.
“There is nothing in the world so
irresistibly contagious as laughter and good humor.” – A Christmas Carol,
Charles Dickens
“Reflect upon your present
blessings – of which every man has many – not on your past misfortunes, of
which all men have some.” – Charles Dickens
FURTHER INSPIRATION AND RECOMMENDATION:
Discover Your Dharma – A Vedic Guide to Finding Your Purpose by Sahara Rose – host of Highest Self Podcast.
The dharma discovery journey talks
about five stages: self-awareness, self-improvement, awakening, higher
consciousness, stepping into your dharma. As you read those descriptions, you
can identify at which stage you are.
It further explains, three paths to
following dharma: leap – as it sounds, for example, quitting a job, investing
all money, moving to a new country. Transition – for example, you keep your
regular job and use your free time for what you love to do, but you have to be
committed to do it on regular basis. Accidental discovery – for example you take
a class that was required or someone asked you to do it with them, and you fell
in love with what was done during that class and it becomes your passion and
way of living.
Then, dharma is connected with
three phases of dosha: vata – visionary who thinks outside the box; pitta –
ambitious, driven individual; kapha – empathetic, generous soul.
Our life should be a cycle through
those three phases of dosha, but some of us get stuck in one phase for life.
Thus, understanding ourselves and
our actions, which comes down to consciousness/awareness, will make us move
naturally through those phases.
This book gives a lot of practical
examples, so it’s easy to grasp. Everything is encoded inside us. They key is
to discover what it is. One of the ways of finding out is to pay attention what
triggers us. Everything happens for a reason, good or bad, and you need to ask
yourself what was the lesson to be learned. A lot of times, we assume or
project things, which is a distortion, opposite of discovering the truth. When
you feel being pulled towards something, then you should follow it. Keep
exploring. Be curious. Those are directions of your dharma.


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