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Vanity Fair » (Reprint)

Book cover image of Vanity Fair by William Makepeace Thackeray

Authors: William Makepeace Thackeray
ISBN-13: 9780099518938, ISBN-10: 0099518937
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Random House UK
Date Published: May 2009
Edition: Reprint

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Author Biography: William Makepeace Thackeray

About the Contributor:
Joanna Trollope is the author of THE BEST OF FRIENDS, OTHER PEOPLE'S CHILDREN, and most recently, MARRYING THE MISTRESS, among other books. She lives in England.
William Makepeace Thackeray, whose satiric novels are often regarded as the great upper-class counterpart to Dickens's panoramic depiction of lower-class Victorian society, was born on July 18, 1811, in Calcutta, India. His father, a prosperous official of the British East India Company, died four years later, and at the age of six Thackeray was sent to England to be educated. After graduating from the Charterhouse School in London, he entered Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1829 but left the following year without taking a degree. After reading law for a short time at the Middle Temple he moved to Paris in 1832 to study art. Although he eventually abandoned the idea of painting as a career, Thackeray continued to draw throughout his life, illustrating many of his own works. When financial reversals wiped out his inheritance, he resettled in London and turned to journalism for a livelihood. By then he had married Isabella Shawe, a young Irishwoman with whom he had three daughters.
Thackeray's earliest literary success, "The Yellowplush Correspondence," a group of satiric sketches written in the guise of a cockney footman's memoirs, was serialized in Fraser's Magazine beginning in 1837. "Catherine" (serialized 1839-40; published 1869), his first novel, parodied the crime stories popular in Victorian England. Under the name Michael Angelo Titmarsh, the most famous of his many pseudonyms, Thackeray turned out "The Paris Sketch Book" (1840) and "The Irish Sketch-Book" (1843), two popular volumesof travel writing. "The Luck of Barry Lyndon" (1844), which chronicles the adventures of an Irish knave in eighteenth-century England, marked his first serious attack on social pretension. In "The Book of Snobs" (1848), a collection of satiric portraits originally published in Punch magazine (1846-47), he lampooned the avarice and snobbery occasioned by the Industrial Revolution.
"Vanity Fair," Thackeray's resplendent social satire exposing the greed and corruption raging in England during the turmoil of the Napoleonic wars, brought him immediate acclaim when it appeared in Punch beginning in 1847. "The more I read Thackeray's works," wrote Charlotte Bronte, "the more certain I am that he stands alone—alone in his sagacity, alone in his truth, alone in his feeling (his feeling, though he makes no noise about it, is about the most genuine that ever lived on a printed page), alone in his power, alone in his simplicity, alone in his self-control. Thackeray is a Titan. . . . I regard him as the first of modern masters."

Book Synopsis

Vanity Fair is a story of two heroines—-one humble, the other a scheming social climber—-who meet in boarding school and embark on markedly different lives. Amid the swirl of London's posh ballrooms and affairs of love and war, their fortunes rise and fall. Through it all, Thackeray lampoons the shallow values of his society, reserving the most pointed barbs for the upper crust. What results is a prescient look at the dogged pursuit of wealth and status—-and the need for humility.

Table of Contents

Before the Curtainix
IChiswick Mall11
IIIn Which Miss Sharp and Miss Sedley Prepare to Open the Campaign18
IIIRebecca Is in Presence of the Enemy29
IVThe Green Silk Purse38
VDobbin of Ours52
VIVauxhall64
VIICrawley of Queen's Crawley78
VIIIPrivate and Confidential87
IXFamily Portraits97
XMiss Sharp Begins to Make Friends105
XIArcadian Simplicity112
XIIQuite a Sentimental Chapter128
XIIISentimental and Otherwise137
XIVMiss Crawley at Home150
XVIn Which Rebecca's Husband Appears for a Short Time171
XVIThe Letter on the Pincushion181
XVIIHow Captain Dobbin Bought a Piano190
XVIIIWho Played on the Piano Captain Dobbin Bought200
XIXMiss Crawley at Nurse213
XXIn Which Captain Dobbin Acts as the Messenger of Hymen225
XXIA Quarrel About an Heiress236
XXIIA Marriage and Part of a Honeymoon246
XXIIICaptain Dobbin Proceeds on His Canvass256
XXIVIn Which Mr. Osborne Takes Down the Family Bible263
XXVIn Which All the Principal Personages Think Fit to Leave Brighton278
XXVIBetween London and Chatham300
XXVIIIn Which Amelia Joins Her Regiment309
XXVIIIIn Which Amelia Invades the Low Countries316
XXIXBrussels326
XXX"The Girl I Left Behind Me"341
XXXIIn Which Jos Sedley Takes Care of His Sister351
XXXIIIn Which Jos Takes Flight, and the War is Brought To a Close364
XXXIIIIn Which Miss Crawley's Relations Are very Anxious About Her383
XXXIVJames Crawley's Pipe is Put Out395
XXXVWidow and Mother414
XXXVIHow to Live Well on Nothing a Year426
XXXVIIThe Subject Continued436
XXXVIIIA Family in a Very Small Way452
XXXIXA Cynical Chapter468
XLIn Which Becky is Recognized by the Family479
XLIIn Which Becky Revisits the Halls of Her Ancestors489
XLIIWhich Treats of the Osborne Family502
XLIIIIn Which the Reader has to Double the Cape510
XLIVA Roundabout Chapter between London and Hampshire521
XLVBetween Hampshire and London532
XLVIStruggles and Trials542
XLVIIGaunt House551
XLVIIIIn Which the Reader is Introduced to the Very Best of Company561
XLIXIn Which We Enjoy Three Courses and a Dessert574
LContains a Vulgar Incident582
LIIn Which a Charade is Acted Which May or May Not Puzzle the Reader593
LIIIn Which Lord Steyne Shows Himself in a Most Amiable Light613
LIIIA Rescue and a Catastrophe625
LIVSunday After the Battle635
LVIn Which the Same Subject is Pursued645
LVIGeorgy is Made a Gentleman663
LVIIEothen677
LVIIIOur Friend the Major686
LIXThe Old Piano699
LXReturns to the Genteel World711
LXIIn Which Two Lights are Put Out718
LXIIAm Rhein733
LXIIIIn Which We Meet an Old Acquaintance745
LXIVA Vagabond Chapter759
LXVFull of Business and Pleasure777
LXVIAmantium Irae786
LXVIIWhich Contains Births, Marriages, and Deaths803
Afterword823
Selected Bibligraphy831
A Note on the Text832

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