Sunday, December 02, 2007

When pop and lit converge

Although most "popular authors" get forgotten, not all do. A few are both popular and accepted into the club of immortal literati.
Dickens in America

On this day in 1867 Charles Dickens gave the first reading of his American tour. Like all but a few over the five months, the evening was a sell-out, some having slept out overnight to beat a ticket line almost a half-mile long. This first-night audience included all the great and triple-named of the New England literary elite -- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Oliver Wendell Holmes, James Russell Lowell, Charles Eliot Norton -- though not all were impressed. Emerson complained that the performance was too polished for his taste, as Twain would say later that the New Year's Eve reading he attended was but "glittering frostwork." But this was the minority view, and from two used to getting the lecture-hall praise and dollars that now went to Dickens -- some $140,000 profit for this tour, and an estimated two million dollars in today's money for Dickens's last two years of readings at home and abroad.
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1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Second posting

As you may know, this Dickens event has a little-known Herman Melville in attendance in Frederick Busch's novel, "The Night Inspector."
Good stuff.

-eric