<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p><b>"So dramatically convincing that it is all the more surprising how much of it is historically verifiable . . . [Jarvis] has written a novel that reflects upon the world-altering effects of novel reading."--</b><i><b>The Atlantic </b></i><br><i></i><br><i>Death and Mr. Pickwick</i> by Stephen Jarvis is a vast, richly imagined, Dickensian work about the rough-and-tumble world that produced an author who defined an age.</p><p><i>The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club</i>, featuring the fat and lovable Mr. Pickwick and his cockney manservant, Sam Weller, began as a series of whimsical sketches, the brainchild of the brilliant, erratic, misanthropic illustrator named Robert Seymour. When Seymour's publishers, after trying to match his magical etchings with a number of writers, settled on a young storyteller using the pen name Boz, as the young Charles Dickens signed his work, <i>The Pickwick Papers </i>went on to become a worldwide phenomenon, and Dickens became, in the eyes of many, the most important writer of his time. The fate of Robert Seymour, Mr. Pickwick's creator, was a very different story--one untold before now.</p><p>Few novels deserve to be called magnificent: <i>Death and Mr. Pickwick</i> is one of them.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>"Formidably knowledgeable...Jarvis sends readers on marvelous excursions into English social and cultural life in the early nineteenth century."--<i>The Washington Post</i></p><p>"For someone saddened that there will never be any more new novels coming from the pen of Charles Dickens, Jarvis's sprawling, eight-hundred-page work could be the next big thing."--NPR</p><p>"As crowded, rude, and brilliantly inventive as the great pre-Dickensian caricatures it celebrates." --<i>The Guardian</i> (London)</p><p>"Brimming with colourful characters, written with tremendous verve and bursting with information...it exuberantly resurrects an age of transition and enthrallingly depicts the pleasures and pressures of creativity."<br>--Peter Kemp, <i>Sunday Times</i> (London)</p><p>"A masterpiece of imagination supported by a mountain of research." --<i>Sunday Telegraph</i> (London)</p><p>"Some may view this book as a remarkable piece of literary detection, others a dazzlingly written and superbly imagined exposition on how art and writing are gestated and born. Or both." --<i>Daily Mail</i> (London)</p><p>"It offers a reading experience as immersive as Hilary Mantel's <i>Wolf Hall</i>, and as visionary in its capacity to connect us with past lives." --<i>Independent</i> (London)</p><p>"A wonderful creation of the imaginative world in which Dickens and his collaborators discovered Pickwick and his companions--witty, rambling, and vastly well informed." --Rowan Williams, <i>New Statesman</i></p><p>"A vast, sprawling epic, packed with digression and detail, it is a brilliant achievement for a first-time novelist." --<i>BBC History Magazine</i></p><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>Stephen Jarvis</b> was born in Essex, England. Following graduate studies at Oxford University, he quickly tired of his office job and began doing unusual things every weekend and writing about them for <i>The</i> <i>Daily Telegraph</i>. These activities included learning the flying trapeze, walking on red-hot coals, getting hypnotized to revisit past lives, and entering the British Snuff-Taking Championship.<i>Death and Mr. Pickwick</i> is his first novel. He lives in Berkshire, England.
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