With an Introduction and
Notes by Doreen Roberts, University of Kent at Canterbury
Bleak House is one of Dicken's finest achievements, establishing his
reputation as a serious and mature novelist, as well as a brilliant
comic writer. It is at once a complex mystery story that fully engages
the reader in the work of detection, and an unforgettable indictment
of an indifferent society. Its representations of a great city's underworld,
and of the law's corruption and delay, draw upon the author's personal
knowledge and experience. But it is his symbolic art that projects
these things in a vision that embraces black comedy, cosmic farce,
and tragic ruin.
In a unique creative experiment, Dickens divides the narrative between
his heroine, Esther Summerson, who is psychologically interesting in
her own right, and an unnamed narrator whose perspective both complements
and challenges hers.