Navigation

Related Articles

Filter by Category

Filter by Author

Back to Latest Articles
Charles Dickens Novel of the Month – Little Dorrit

Charles Dickens Novel of the Month – Little Dorrit


Natalie Stanton
Natalie Stanton
Charles Dickens Novel of the Month –...

Little Dorrit is a classic tale of imprisonment that was published in 1857. Upon publication it immediately outsold any of Dickens’s previous books. The story is set around William Dorrit, imprisoned for debt in Marshalsea Prison, and his daughter and helpmate, Amy, or ‘Little Dorrit’. The novel charts the progress of the Dorrit family from poverty to riches. Amy’s only escape is to work as a seamstress for the kind Mrs Clennam. When Mrs Clennam’s son Arthur returns to England after many years abroad, he takes an interest in Amy. However, when it is unexpectedly discovered that her father is heir to a fortune, some shocking secrets unfold and Amy’s life changes forever.

Little Dorrit has been adapted into a BBC Television Series and even won a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Limited Series.

Interesting Fact:

The TV series was filmed in the following locations: Chenies Manor House, Luton Hoo, and Hellfire Caves in Buckinghamshire; Deal Castle in Kent; Hampton Court Palace in Surrey as the Marshalsea; and the Old Royal Naval College in Greenwich.

Suggestion: Year 10 Bushey Meads Students may wish to add this to their ‘Summer Reading List’. It will help with wider reading of Charles Dickens and a deeper understanding of class and social division.

Related Articles

Supporting the Craft of Great Essay Writing
English

Supporting the Craft of Great Essay Writing

Our week started with a superb Monday Magic Moment delivered by Head of Geography and teaching and learning lead in Humanities and Social Sciences Miss Dunsby focussing on...

Posted on by Jeremy Turner
A Defining Tale
English

A Defining Tale

Joining a Year 11 English lesson this week I found myself immersed in the world of Scrooge. Our GCSE English gains students two GCSEs: one in English Language and the other in...

Posted on by Claire Till