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  • Dickens Quarterly Checklist
  • Kim Edwards Keates and Claire Horrocks
Kim Edwards Keates
University of Bolton
Claire Horrocks
Liverpool John Moores University

Secondary Sources

Batchelor, John. “Dickens, Tennyson, Kipling.” A Companion to Literary Biography. Ed. Richard Bradford. Chichester: Wiley Blackwell, 2018. 489–509. ISBN: 978-1118896297.
Bell, Emily. “Evidence and Invention: The Materials of Literary Biography.” A Companion to Literary Biography. Ed. Richard Bradford. Chichester: Wiley Blackwell, 2018. 309–24. ISBN: 978-1118896297. [CD]
Berman, Carolyn Vellenga. “Snoring for the million: Pickwick and the parliamentary papers.” Nineteenth-Century Contexts, 2018. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/08905495.2018.1516959
Cook, Peter. The Romantic Legacy of Charles Dickens. Palgrave Macmillan, 2018. ISBN: 978-3319967905.
Dickens Studies Annual: Essays on Victorian Fiction 49.2 (2018). [Contents: Christina Jen, “‘Drop the Curtain’: Astonishment and the Anxieties of Authorship in Charles Dickens’s Sketches by Boz”: 249–78; Eric G. Lorentzen, “‘This Schoolroom is a Nation’: Subverting the Catechistic Method in Dickens”: 279–329; Caroline Wilkinson, “The Handmade Landscape: Manual Labor and the Construction of Eden in Dickens’s Martin Chuzzlewit”: 330–48; Christian Dickinson, “Neither High-Church, Low-Church, nor No-Church: Religious Dissatisfaction and Dissent in Bleak House”: 349–77; Robert E. Lougy, “Entangled Paths and Ghostly Resonances: Bleak House and Oedipus Rex”: 378–401; Kailana Durnan, “Getting Bored with Hard Times”: 402–28; Kristen A. Pond, “’Tis the Mind That Sees Things’: Flexible Epistemology as Social Reform in Charles Reade’s It Is Never Too Late to Mend”: 429–50; Edward Guiliano, “‘They sought it with thimbles, they sought it with care’: Lewis Carroll Studies, 2004–2017”: 451–80.]
Dickens Quarterly 35.3 (September 2018). [Contents: Jeremy Parrott, “More Newly Identified Contributors to Household Words”: 189–206; William F. Long, “Gossip and Fiction in Summer 1858: the Dickens Scandal and The Gordian Knot”: 207–23; Maria K. Bachman, “Back to the Future: Charles Dickens and the Prospective Brain”: 224–44; Daniel Siegel, “Griffith’s Silent Cricket”: 245–61; Giles Whiteley, “Dickens and Southey: The Mystery of Edwin Drood and ‘The Curse of Kehama’”: 262–66; Laura Colombino (Rev. Felicia Bonaparte, The Poetics of Poesis: The Making of Nineteenth-Century English Fiction): 267–69; Kathy Rees (Rev. Ruth Livesey, Writing the Stage Coach Nation: Locality on the Move in Nineteenth-Century British Literature): 270–72; “Notices”: 273–76; Clare Horrocks and Kim Edwards Keates, “The Dickens Checklist”: 277–80.]
Guest, Kristen. “The Right Stuff: Class Identity, Material Culture and the Victorian Police Detective.” Journal of Victorian Culture, 2018. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/jvcult/vcy053
Henry, Nancy. Women, Literature and Finance in Victorian Britain: Cultures of Investment. Palgrave Macmillan, 2018. ISBN: 978-3319943305. [DS, MC, OMF]
Leckie, Barbara. Open Houses: Poverty, the Novel, and the Architectural Idea in Nineteenth-Century Britain. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: U of Pennsylvania P, 2018. ISBN: 978-0812250299. [BH]
The Dickensian 114.2 (2018). [Contents: Nick Cambridge, Black Health: Charles Dickens’s Medical History Revisited”: 117–33; William F. Long, “A Case for Dickens’s Authorship of an Unattributed Theatrical Review”: 134–46; Leon Litvack, “Dickens and the Stephen Party: New Letters of E. M. S. Paine”: 147–56; Jeremy Tambling, “Steven Marcus (1928–2018): A Tribute”: 157–58; Nic Panagopoulos, “Courtly Love in Great Expectations”: 159–69; William F. Long, “Dickens Before Sketches by Boz: Earliest Reactions to his Earliest Works”: 170–80; Letters to the Editor, 181–83; Louis James (Rev. Dickensian Drama): 184–85; Angus Easson (Rev. new ed. of Patten’s study of Dickens and his Publishers): 186–87; Paul Graham (Rev. new productions of Great Expectations and Hard Times): 188–91].
Little Doric 5.1 (Sept. 2018). [Contents: Marion Anderson and Eric Summers, “From the Editors”: 1; Dan Wall, “Charting the Streets of London in Sketches by Boz and De Quincey’s Confession of an English Opium Eater”: 2–11; Alison Summers, “Female Writers of the Great War”: 12–15; Christine Thomas, “Harriet Martineau and Charles Dickens”: 16–29.]
Murray, Nathan. “A possible source for the apocryphal anecdote concerning the reception of Little Nell’s death.” Notes and Queries 65.3 (2018...

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