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Jeanette
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Jul 03, 2017 04:04AM

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Thanks, Jeanette. It's one of my favourite Dickens, although I haven't read them all by a long shot.


Wow, give yourself a few weeks. I read The Pickwick Papers earlier this year, and wouldn't mind reading more in the near future :)


I'm often awed by the thought of Dickens' sitting there and writing so many 800+ page novels by lamplight with no computer.


Back in the 80s when I was a teenager, I used to write them by hand too, and then face the colossal job of typing them with an electric typewriter, for household computers were still a thing of the future :) I find it hard to imagine those days now.

Doing a Uni degree from 1988 to 1991 just with an electric typewriter and no computer at home boggles my mind now. How about you?


Wow, I love stories like this, about such major changes within relatively short periods of time. When my kids, who are in their teens, hear about the pre-computer days, they really think it sounds like a dinosaur era :) My parents never, ever gave in and conquered the computer at all.

You must have been young when you started writing books. I mainly only wrote short pieces (lots of them ) until my early forties when I wrote my first book.

Picking up the Pieces was the first novel I had published, and I was about 28 :) Even when I proofread the old edition for a reprint once, I found I had to update a lot of technology, which had changed in just ten years or so.


Thanks very much, Jeanette :) I'm so happy to hear you enjoyed it. In turn, I read Jodie's Story, and also Mirage, a long time ago, probably back when they were published :) I found both very convicting, and they stayed in my mind for a long time afterward. And as you say, things have changed so much since the 90s, and even far more recently.