How This Works

📘 Simply find the title link inside each synopsis and click.
You will either be sent to a PDF link or a site where the novel is served.

📘
"If (as you are intently perusing the linked novels and/or other content located on this blog) you encounter a broken link, please comment as such on the post so I can try to rectify the issue or remove the post completely. Thank you in advance for your time and consideration." ~ Victor Hubress

📘 Most Summary Information Sourced From Wikipedia

A Quick Message To My Followers

📘 Alas, the time has come that I must appeal to your softer side and ask for your support. If this site has tickled your fancy in any way and you have possibly returned to my silly corner of the internet on numerous occasions, consider a small donation to this site so I may continue to bring you Truths and Hogwashes.

*Just a note: I do not or will ever collect or sell your information; your gracious donations are processed entirely through Paypal. Since I am just an individual, your contributions to my future endeavors are not tax-deductible.

**A Second Note: You will be taken to a link for The Thirsty Spittoon, the other blog I run; I could not change the name to this blog, but rest assured I am the same person.

Please Support This Site

Tuesday, March 28, 2017

Bleak House 

Bleak House is one of Charles Dickens’ major novels, first published as a serial between March 1852-September 1853. The novel has many characters and several sub-plots, and the story is told partly by the novel’s heroine, Esther Summerson, and partly by an omniscient narrator. At the center of Bleak House is the long-running legal case, Jarndyce and Jarndyce, which came about because someone wrote several conflicting wills. This legal case is used by Dickens to satirize the English judicial system, and he makes use of his earlier experiences as a law clerk and as a litigant seeking to enforce copyright on his earlier books.
   Although the legal profession criticized Dickens’ satire as exaggerated, this novel helped support a judicial reform movement, culminating in the enactment of legal reform in the 1870s.
     There is some debate among scholars as to when Bleak House is set. The English legal historian Sir William Holdsworth sets the action in 1827; however, reference to preparation for the building of a railroad in Chapter LV suggests the 1830s.

No comments:

Post a Comment