In his introduction Angus Wilson discusses what is known about Dicken’s intentions and suggests that, as well as a crime novel, Edwin Drood is a work in which Dickens develops his lifelong preoccupation with the forces of good and evil. But as intriguing as this central plot are the startling innovations in Dicken’s work and the troubled elements lurking within the novel: a dark opium underworld, the uneasy and violent fantasies of its inhabitants, the disquieting presence of old ‘Princess Puffer’, his portrait of the quiet cathedral town of Cloisterham from which people have to escape in order to save themselves – and, at the centre, the menacing figure of Jasper. The main issue in the novel is the disappearance of Edwin Drood and the suspicion that he has been murdered. The Mystery of Edwin Drood is even more of a mystery the Dickens himself intended, for he dies before completing it. Edited with an Introduction and Notes by David Paroissien. Religion - Study, history & religious textsĪntiquity, Specialist & Rare Books (Other Quality)Ĭondition: GOOD (Inscription on inside cover)Įdited by Arthur J Cox with an introduction by Angus Wilson. Dickens died before completing Edwin Drood, leaving generations of readers to try and solve its tantalizing mystery.
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