The History of Pendennis: His Fortunes And Misfortunes, His Friends And His Greatest Enemy

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Penguin UK, 26.06.1986 - 816 Seiten
Written immediately after Vanity Fair, Pendennis has a similar atmosphere of brooding disillusion, tempered by the most jovial of wits. But here Thackeray plunders his own past to create the character of Pendennis and the world in which he lives: from miserable schoolboy to striving journalist, from carefree Oxbridge to the high (and low) life of London. The result is a superbly panoramic blend of people, action and background. The true ebb and flow of life is caught and the credibility of Pen, his worldly uncle, the Major, and many of the other characters, extends far beyond the pages of the novel. Held together by Thackeray's flowing, confident prose, with its conversational ease of tone, Pendennis is as rich a portrait of England in the 1830s and 40s as it is a thorough and thoroughly entertaining self-portrait.

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Shows how First Love may Interrupt Breakfast
A Pedigree and other Family Matters
In which Pendennis Appears as a Very Young Man Indeed
PENDENNIS
Contains both Love and
In which the Major Makes his Appearance
In which Pen is kept Waiting at the Door while the Reader is Informed who Little Laura
In which the Major Opens the Campaign
Which is Passed in the Neighbourhood of Ludgate Hill
In which the History still Hovers about Fleet Street
A Dinner in the
The Pall Mall Gazette
Where Pen appears in Town and Country
In which the Sylph Reappears
In which Colonel Altamont Appears and Disappears
Relates to Mr Harry Fokers Affairs

Facing the Enemy
Negotiation
In which a ShootingMatch is Proposed
A Crisis
In which Miss Fotheringay Makes a New Engagement
The Happy Village
Which Concludes the First Part of this History
Alma Mater
Pendennis of Boniface
Rakes Progress
Flight after Defeat
Prodigals Return
New Faces
A Little Innocent
Contains both Love and Jealousy
Notes
Contains some BallPractising
Which is both Quarrelsome and Sentimental
Babylon
The Knights of the Temple
Old and New Acquaintances
In which the Printers Devil Comes to the Door
Carries the Reader both to Richmond and Greenwich
Contains a Novel Incident
Alsatia
In which the Colonel Narrates some of his Adventures
A Chapter of Conversations
Miss Amorys Partners
Monseigneur samuse
A Visit of Politeness
In Shepherds
In or Near the Temple Garden
The Happy Village Again
Which had very nearly been the Last of the Story
A Critical Chapter
Convalescence
Fannys Occupations Gone
In which Fanny Engages a New Medical
Foreign Ground
Fairoaks To Let
Old Friends
Explanations
People and Places
Urheberrecht

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Autoren-Profil (1986)

William Makepeace Thackeray was born in Calcutta in 1811, but sent to England at the age of six. He was educated at Charterhouse and at Trinity College, Cambridge. In 1833 he settled in Paris, after a major financial loss, and tried a career as a painter. It was here he met nineteen-year-old Isabella Shawe, upon whom he based many of his virtuous but weak heroines, and whom he married in 1836. A year later they settled in London, where Thackeray turned seriously to journalism.
His writing for periodicals included The Yellowplush Correspondence, which appeared first in Fraser's Magazine and then in 1841 in book form. Around this time personal and domestic pressures caused the already helpless Isabella to subside into a state of complete and permanent mental collapse and the subsequent breakdown of the marriage formed a central part of Thackeray's consciousness. His early work centred around rogues and villains, most famously in The Luck of Barry Lyndon (1844; revised as The Memoirs of Barry Lyndon, Esq. in 1856), and in his masterpiece, Vanity Fair, which appeared in monthly parts in 1847-8 and which most clearly reveals his socially satirical edge. The Book of Snobs, which originally appeared as a series in Punch, also attacks Victorian society with vicious wit. Thackeray's later novels include The History of Pendennis, (1848-50); The History of Henry Esmond, Esq. (1852); The Newcomes (1853-5); The Virginians, (1857-9), which is a sequel to Henry Esmond; and The Adventures of Philip (1860-62). He also wrote a series of lectures, The English Humourists of the Eighteenth Century (1853), and numerous reviews, articles and sketches, usually in the comic vein. From 1860 to 1862 he also edited the Cornhill magazine. Thackeray died suddenly on Christmas Eve, 1863.

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