![]() Part-publication was becoming a thing of the past, the new illustrated magazines, Nineteenth-century novels were illustrated. Serialisation of novels continued well past the 1860s - and many of these later Don Vann in Victorian Novels in Serial (New York: MLA, 1985) Vann shows that Their relationship to chapters in the volume publications for many Victorian novelists. A complete listing of serial instalments and Instalment of Great Expectations in December, 1860, in All the Year Round. Might argue that such a golden age was just about to begin as Dickens published the first Particularly misleading in that the golden age of illustrated fiction was not over - inįact, if one is an aficionado of the nineteenth-century illustrated British magazine, one ![]() Hammerton in Theĭickens Picture-Book (1910) asserts that the later illustrated editions of Dickens Series, devoted entirely to Great Expectations) as to why Great Expectations was not illustrated is correct with respect toĭickens, I cannot agree with his larger claim, namely that the age of the illustratedīook was coming to an end. Alan Watts' article in The Dickens Magazine (in the first ![]()
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