'I think I could be a good woman if I had five thousand a year' Vanity Fair
William Makepeace Thackeray was born on 18 July 1811 in Calcutta in India. After studying at Trinity College Cambridge he worked as a journalist and studied Art in London and Paris. In 1836 he married Isabella Shawe and they went on to have three daughters, one of whom died in infancy. He first found literary success with The Yellowplush Papers in 1837 and went on to write other works such asThe FitzBoodle Papers, Catherine, The Luck of Barry Lyndon and The Snobs of England before he published his masterpiece, Vanity Fair, in 1847. William Makepeace Thackeray died on Christmas Eve in 1863.
The only English novel which...challenges comparison with War and
Peace
*John Carey*
The best thing he ever wrote - sharp, brilliant, touching, clever
and cruel, with an unforgettable heroine
*Joanna Trollope*
Witty, sexy, sandy-haired Becky Sharp, whose impoverished
background explains her hunger for rich men and high position. She
is a rebel from the very first chapter of Thackeray's Vanity Fair.
Her one final act of kindness derives from her constant virtue:
seeing things as they are
*Independent*
A terrific book - bold, funny, scathing and quite unpredictable
*Al Murray*
Becky Sharp may be one of literature's great schemers, but she's
also one of its most memorable and entertaining. More rounded than
almost all the simpering Victorian dolls who followed, she alone is
worth the read
*The Times*
Becky Sharp is one of the best bad women in literature ...she is
deliciously bad in an era when women were not meant to be
*Donna Leon*
Still one of the bitchiest, cattiest, funniest and most
entertaining novels ever written
*The Independent*
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