Charles Dickens was a British author, journalist, editor, illustrator, and social commentator who wrote the beloved classics Oliver Twist, A Christmas Carol, and Great Expectations. His books were first published in monthly serial installments, which became a lucrative source of income following a childhood of abject poverty. Dickens wrote 15 novels in total, including Nicholas Nickleby, David Copperfield, and A Tale of Two Cities. His writing provided a stark portrait of poor and working class people in the Victorian era that helped to bring about social change. Dickens died in June at age 58 and is remembered as one of the most important and influential writers of the 19th century.
FULL NAME: Charles John Huffam Dickens
BORN: February 7,
DIED: June 9,
BIRTHPLACE: Portsmouth, England
SPOUSE: Catherine Thomson Hogarth ()
CHILDREN: Charles Jr., Mary, Kate, Walter, Francis, Alfred, Sydney, Henry, Dora, and Edward
ASTROLOGICAL SIGN: Aquarius
Charles John Huffam Dickens was born on February 7, , in Portsmouth on the southern coast of England. He was the second of eight children born to John Dickens, a naval clerk who dreamed of striking it rich, and Elizabeth Barrow, who aspired to be a teacher and school director. Despite his parents’ best efforts, the family remained poor but nevertheless happy in the early days.
In , they moved to Chatham, Kent, where young Dickens and his siblings were free to roam the countryside and explore the old castle at Rochester. Dickens was a sickly child and prone to spasms, which prevented him from playing sports. He compensated by reading avidly, including such books as Robinson Crusoe, Tom Jones, Peregrine Pickle, and The Arabian Nights, according to The World of Charles Dickens by Fido Martin.
In , the Dickens family moved to Camden Town, a poor neighborhood in London. By then, the family’s financial situation had grown dire, as Charles’ father had a dangerous habit of living beyond the family’s means. Eventually, John was sent to prison for debt in , when Charles was just 12 years old. He boarded with a sympathetic family friend named Elizabeth Roylance, who later inspired the character Mrs. Pipchin in Dickens’ novel Dombey and Son, according to Dickens: A Biography by Fred Kaplan.
Following his father’s imprisonment, Dickens was forced to leave school to work at a boot-blacking factory alongside the River Thames. At the run-down, rodent-ridden factory, Dickens earned 6 shillings a week labeling pots of “blacking,” a substance used to clean fireplaces. It was the best he could do to help support his family, and the strenuous working conditions heavily influenced his future writing and his views on treatment of the poor and working class.
Much to his relief, Dickens was permitted to go back to school when his father received a family inheritance and used it to pay off his debts. He attended the Wellington House Academy in Camden Town, where he encountered what he called “haphazard, desultory teaching [and] poor discipline,” according to The World of Charles Dickens by Angus Wilson. The school’s sadistic headmaster was later the inspiration for the character Mr. Creakle in Dickens’ semi-autobiographical novel David Copperfield.
Charles Dickens wrote 15 novels in his lifetime.
When Dickens was 15, his education was pulled out from under him once again. In , he had to drop out of school and work as an office boy to contribute to his family’s income. However, as it turned out, the job became a launching point for his writing career. Within a year of being hired, Dickens began freelance reporting at the law courts of London. Just a few years later, he was reporting for two major London newspapers.
In , he began submitting sketches to various magazines and newspapers under the pseudonym “Boz,” which was a family nickname. His first published story was “A Dinner at Poplar Walk,” which ran in London’s Monthly Magazine in Seeing his writing in print made his eyes “overflow with joy and pride,” according to Dickens: A Biography. In , his clippings were published in his first book, Sketches by Boz.
Dickens later edited magazines including Household Words and All the Year Round, the latter of which he founded. In both, he promoted and originally published some of his own work such as Oliver Twist and A Tale of Two Cities.
Charles Dickens pictured with his wife, Catherine Hogarth Dickens, and two of their daughters in a horse-drawn carriage, circa
Dickens married Catherine Hogarth in , soon after the publication of his first book, Sketches by Boz. She was the daughter of George Hogarth, the editor of the Evening Chronicle. Dickens and Hogarth went on to have 10 children between and , according to biographer Fred Kaplan. Among them were magazine editor Charles Dickens Jr., painter Kate Dickens Perugini, barrister Henry Fielding Dickens, and Edward Dickens, who entered into politics after immigrating to the Australia.
In , Dickens suffered two devastating losses: the deaths of his infant daughter, Dora, and his father, John. He also separated from his wife in Dickens slandered Catherine publicly and struck up an intimate relationship with a young actor named Ellen “Nelly” Ternan. Sources differ on whether the two started seeing each other before or after Dickens’ marital separation. It is also believed that he went to great lengths to erase any documentation alluding to Ternan’s presence in his life. These major losses and challenges seeped into Dickens’ writing in his “dark novel” period.
A vintage illustration of a scene from Charles Dickens’ Oliver Twist portraying Oliver as he asks for a second helping of porridge at the children’s ward of the workhouse.
Best known for his fiction writing, Dickens wrote a total of 15 novels between and His first was The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club, and his last was The Mystery of Edwin Drood, which went unfinished due to his death.
Dickens’ books were originally published in monthly serial installments that sold for 1 shilling each. The affordable price meant everyday citizens could follow along, though wealthier readers, such as Queen Victoria, were also among Dickens’ fans. Once complete, the stories were published again in novel form.
Dickens’ books provided a stark portrait of poor and working class people in the Victorian era that helped to bring about social change. In the s, following the death of his father and infant daughter, as well as his separation from his wife, Dickens’ novels began to express a darkened worldview. His so-called dark novels are Bleak House (), Hard Times (), and Little Dorrit (). They feature more complicated, thematically grim plots and more complex characters, though Dickens didn’t stray from his typical societal commentary.
Read more about each of Charles Dickens’ novels below:
Serial Publication: April to November
Novel Publication:
In , the same year his first book of illustrations released, Dickens started publishing The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club. His series, originally written as captions for artist Robert Seymour’s humorous sports-themed illustrations, took the form of monthly serial installments. It was wildly popular with readers, and Dickens’ captions proved even more popular than the illustrations they were meant to accompany.
Serial Publication: February to March
Novel Publication: November
While still working on The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club, Dickens began Oliver Twist, or The Parish Boy’s Progress, which would prove to be one of his most popular novels. The book follows the life of an orphan living in the streets of London, where he must get by on his wits and falls in with a gang of juvenile pickpockets led by the dastardly Fagin.
Oliver Twist unromantically portrayed the mistreatment of London orphans, and the slums and poverty described in the novel made for biting social satire. Although very different from the humorous tone of the Pickwick Papers, Oliver Twist was extremely well-received in both England and America, and dedicated readers eagerly anticipated each next monthly installment, according to the biography Charles Dickens by Harold & Miriam Maltz. Even the young Queen Victoria was an avid reader of Oliver Twist, describing it as “excessively interesting.”
Serial Publication: April to October
Novel Publication:
As Dickens was still finishing Oliver Twist, he again began writing his follow-up work in The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby. It tells the story of the title character, who must support his mother and sister following the loss of their comfortable lifestyle when his father dies and the family loses all of their money.
Serial Publication: April to February
Novel Publication:
Taking a few months between projects this time, Dickens’ next serial was The Old Curiosity Shop. Protagonist Nell Trent lives with her grandfather, whose gambling costs them the titular shop. The pair struggles to survive after into hiding to avoid a money lender.
Serial Publication: February to November
Novel Publication:
Right on the heels of The Old Curiosity Shop came Barnaby Rudge. The historical fiction novel, Dickens’ first, follows Barnaby and depicts the chaos of mob violence. The author originated the idea years prior but is thought to have temporarily abandoned it due to a dispute with his publisher.
Serial Publication: January to July
Novel Publication:
After his first American tour, Dickens wrote The Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit. The story is about a man’s struggle to survive on the ruthless American frontier.
Serial Publication: October to April
Novel Publication:
After an uncharacteristic break, Dickens returned with Dombey and Son, which centers on the theme of how business tactics affect a family’s personal finances. Published as a novel in , it takes a dark view of England and is considered pivotal to Dickens’ body of work in that it set the tone for his future novels.
Serial Publication: May to November
Novel Publication: November
Dickens wrote his most autobiographical novel to date with David Copperfield by tapping into his own personal experiences in his difficult childhood and his work as a journalist. The book follows the life of its title character from his impoverished childhood to his maturity and success as a novelist. It was the first work of its kind: No one had ever written a novel that simply followed a character through his everyday life.
David Copperfield is considered one of Dickens’ masterpieces, and it was his personal favorite of his works; he wrote in the book’s preface, “Like many fond parents, I have in my heart of hearts a favourite child. And his name is David Copperfield.” It also helped define the public’s expectations of a Dickensian novel. In The Life of Charles Dickens, biographer John Forster wrote “Dickens never stood so high in reputation as at the completion of Copperfield,” and biographer Fred Kaplan called the novel “an exploration of himself through his art more direct, more honest, more resolute than in his earlier fiction.”
Serial Publication: to
Novel Publication:
His next work, Bleak House, dealt with the hypocrisy of British society. The first of his “dark novels,” it was considered his most complex novel yet. Drawing upon his brief experiences as a law clerk and court reporter, the novel is built around a long-running legal case involving several conflicting wills and was described by biographer Fido Martin as “England’s greatest satire on the law’s incompetence and delays.” Dickens’ satire was so effective that it helped support a successful movement toward legal reform in the s.
Serial Publication: April to August
Novel Publication:
Dickens followed Bleak House with Hard Times, which takes place in an industrial town at the peak of economic expansion. Hard Times focuses on the shortcomings of employers as well as those who seek change.
Serial Publication: December and June
Novel Publication:
Another novel from Dickens’ darker period is Little Dorrit, a fictional study of how human values conflict with the world’s brutality.
Serial Publication: April to November
Novel Publication:
Coming out of his “dark novel” period, Dickens published A Tale of Two Cities in the periodical he founded, All the Year Round. The historical novel takes place during the French Revolution in Paris and London. Its themes focus on the need for sacrifice, the struggle between the evils inherent in oppression and revolution, and the possibility of resurrection and rebirth.
A Tale of Two Cities was a tremendous success and remains Dickens’ best-known work of historical fiction. Biographer Fido Martin called the novel “pure Dickens, but essentially a Dickens we have never seen before. This is a Dickens who has at last captured in prose fiction the stage heroics he adored.”
Serial Publication: December to August
Novel Publication: October
Many people consider Great Expectations Dickens’ greatest literary accomplishment. The story—Dickens’ second that’s narrated in the first person—focuses on the lifelong journey of moral development for the novel’s protagonist, an orphan named Pip. With extreme imagery and colorful characters, the well-received novel touches on wealth and poverty, love and rejection, and good versus evil. The novel was a financial success and received nearly universal acclaim, with readers responding positively to the novel’s themes of love, morality, social mobility, and the eventual triumph of good over evil.
Serial Publication: May to November
Novel Publication:
In June , Dickens was a passenger on a train that plunged off a bridge in Kent, according to biographer Fred Kaplan. He tended to the wounded and even saved the lives of some passengers before assistance arrived, and he was able to retrieve his unfinished manuscript for his next novel, Our Mutual Friend, from the wreckage. That book, a satire about wealth and the Victorian working class, wasn’t received as well as Dickens’ other works, with some finding the plot too complex and disorganized.
Serial Publication: April
Novel Publication:
Dickins’ final novel, The Mystery of Edwin Drood, began its monthly serialized publication in April However, Dickens died less than two months later, leaving the novel unfinished. Only six of a planned 12 installments of his final work were completed at the time of his death, according to biographer Fido Martin.
The carriage Commodore, once owned by Charles Dickens, in New York City
In , Dickens and his wife, Catherine, embarked on a five-month lecture tour of the United States. Dickens spoke of his opposition to slavery and expressed his support for additional reform. His lectures, which began in Virginia and ended in Missouri, were so widely attended that ticket scalpers gathered outside his events. Biographer J.B. Priestley wrote that during the tour, Dickens enjoyed “the greatest welcome that probably any visitor to America has ever had.”
“They flock around me as if I were an idol,” bragged Dickens, a known show-off. Although he enjoyed the attention at first, he eventually resented the invasion of privacy. He was also annoyed by what he viewed as Americans’ gregariousness and crude habits, as he later expressed in American Notes for General Circulation (). The sarcastic travelogue, which Dickens’ penned upon his return to England, criticized American culture and materialism.
After his criticism of the American people during his first tour, Dickens later launched a second U.S. tour from to , where he hoped to set things right with the public and made charismatic speeches promising to praise the United States in reprints of American Notes for General Circulation and Martin Chuzzlewit, his novel set in the American frontier.
An illustrated scene from Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol when Ebenezer Scrooge is visited by the ghost of his old business partner, Jacob Marley.
On December 19, , Dickens published A Christmas Carol, one of his most timeless and beloved works. The book features the famous protagonist Ebenezer Scrooge, a curmudgeonly old miser who—with the help of the Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present, and Yet to Come—finds the holiday spirit. Dickens penned the book in just six weeks, beginning in October and finishing just in time for Christmas celebrations. Like his earlier works, it was intended as a social criticism, to bring attention to the hardships faced by England’s poorer classes.
The book was a roaring success, selling more than 6, copies upon publication. Readers in England and America were touched by the book’s empathetic emotional depth; one American entrepreneur reportedly gave his employees an extra day’s holiday after reading it. Despite its incredible success, the high production costs and Dickens’ disagreements with the publisher meant he received relatively few profits for A Christmas Carol, according to Kaplan, which were further reduced when Dickens was forced to take legal action against the publishers for making illegal copies.
A Christmas Carol was Dickens’ most popular book in the United States, selling more than two million copies in the century after its first publication there, according to Charles Dickens: A Life by Claire Tomalin. It is also one of Dickens’ most adapted works, and Ebenezer Scrooge has been portrayed by such actors as Michael Caine, Albert Finney, Patrick Stewart, Tim Curry, and Jim Carrey.
Dickens published several other Christmas novellas following A Christmas Carol, including The Chimes () The Cricket on the Hearth (), The Battle of Life (), and The Haunted Man and the Ghost’s Bargain (). In , he wrote a stage play titled No Thoroughfare.
On June 8, , Dickens had a stroke at his home in Kent, England, after a day of writing The Mystery of Edwin Drood. He died the next day at age
At the time, Edwin Drood had begun its serial publication; it was never finished. Only half of the planned installments of his final novel were completed at the time of Dickens’ death, according to Fido.
Dickens was buried in Poet’s Corner at Westminster Abbey, with thousands of mourners gathering at the beloved author’s gravesite.
When 48 Doughty Street in London—which was Dickens’ home from to —was threatened with demolition, it was saved by the Dickens Fellowship and renovated, becoming the Dickens House Museum. Open since , it appears like a middle-class Victorian home exactly as Dickens lived in it, and it houses a significant collection related to Dickens and his works.
Actors Jack Wild and Mark Lester (respectively) portraying the Artful Dodger and Oliver Twist in Carol Reed’s film Oliver! (), based upon Charles Dickens’ novel A Christmas Carol ().
Many of Dickens’ major works have been adapted for movies and stage plays, with some, like A Christmas Carol, repackaged in various forms over the years. Reginald Owen portrayed Ebenezer Scrooge in one of the earliest Hollywood adaptations of the novella in , while Albert Finney played the character alongside Alec Guinness as Marley’s ghost in the film Scrooge.
Some adaptations have taken unique approaches to the source material. Michael Caine portrayed Scrooge in The Muppet Christmas Carol (), with members of the Muppets playing other characters from the story, and Gonzo the Great portraying Dickens as a narrator. Bill Murray played a version of Scrooge in a modern-day comedic take on the classic story. Several animated versions of A Christmas Carol have also been adapted, with Jim Carrey playing Scrooge in a computer-generated film that used motion-capture animation to create the character.
Several more of Dickens’ works have been similarly adapted. Famed director David Lean made celebrated adaptations of both Great Expectations () and Oliver Twist (). The latter novel was also adapted into a successful stage musical called Oliver!, and a movie version—directed by Carol Reed—of that same musical won the Academy Award for Best Picture and Director.
More recently, The Personal History of David Copperfield () put a comedic spin on Dickens’ personal favorite of his own works, with Dev Patel performing the title role. Barbara Kingsolver also adapted the novel in her Pulitzer Prize winner Demon Copperhead ().
Fact Check: We strive for accuracy and fairness. If you see something that doesn’t look right, contact us!
The staff is a team of people-obsessed and news-hungry editors with decades of collective experience. We have worked as daily newspaper reporters, major national magazine editors, and as editors-in-chief of regional media publications. Among our ranks are book authors and award-winning journalists. Our staff also works with freelance writers, researchers, and other contributors to produce the smart, compelling profiles and articles you see on our site. To meet the team, visit our About Us page:
Colin McEvoy joined the staff in , and before that had spent 16 years as a journalist, writer, and communications professional. He is the author of two true crime books: Love Me or Else and Fatal Jealousy. He is also an avid film buff, reader, and lover of great stories.