Charles Dickens Worries About His Sales
The New York Times City Room blog is carrying a story on Dickens’ handwritten revisions of “A Christmas Carol.” This post “A Christmas Rewrite” by Alison Leigh Cowan is a companionable reminder that we all have to revise–and Dickens made at least one major after the copy had gone to the printer.
I was mainly struck by the fact that he wrote this lovable classic, about a cold-hearted rich man who turns generous, under financial pressure himself.
“At the time “A Christmas Carol” was written, Dickens feared for his own future. He had six children to feed, a large house in London to maintain and a lavish lifestyle. Christmas was approaching. Yet the work he was then producing, a few chapters at a time, “Martin Chuzzlewit,’’ was not selling as well as earlier installments of “The Pickwick Papers†or “Nicholas Nickleby.†Bitterly, he confided to a friend that his bank account was bare.”
He turned out his Christmas story just in time for the season, but in spite of its golden future, it fared dismally financially that year.
Good (emboldening) to remember these stories, especially knowing the happy ending.
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Categories: inspiring example, writing a novel