Papeles póstumos del club Pickwick (I-III)

[Pickwick Papers]
Año: 
1837
Género: 
Público: 
Valoración moral: 
Género: Literatura
Sin inconvenientes.
Algunos inconvenientes morales.
Presenta pasajes de cierta entidad contrarios a la fe o la moral.
Presenta pasajes escabrosos o un fondo ideológico general que puede confundir a personas con una escasa formación cristiana.
Abundan los pasajes escabrosos o un fondo ideológico contrario o extraño a los valores cristianos.
Por sus contenidos explícitos, la obra contraría la fe o la moral de la Iglesia Católica o el cristianismo en general.

These are the posthumous papers of the members of the Pickwick Club - Samuel Pickwick, Tupman, Snodgrass and Winkler. They had been requested to write down an account of their adventurous journeys and the observations of people they met. There is no more plot than that. So there is just the visit to Rochester to see the rascal Jingle, to the home of Mr. Wardle, Dingley Dell, the arrival of a new servant for Mr. Pickwick in Sam Weller, the journey to Eatanswill for a parliamentary election, the journeys to St Edmunds, to Ipswich, to Dingley Dell again for Christmas, and an account of the court case between Pickwick and his landlady Mrs Bardell. Then it's off to Bath, to Pickwick in prison for failing to pay the damages awarded in the courts, to meet the parents of Sam Weller, the strange affair of the two medical students, and then the marriage of Snodgrass.
Charles Dickens was born in Kent, England, in 1812 and died in 1870. This was Dickens first work and met with immediate popular acclaim.
C.C. (U.K., 2016)