A Christmas Carol
After reading Christmas Carol, the notoriously reclusive Thomas Carlyle was “seized with a perfect convulsion of hospitality” and threw not one but two Christmas dinner parties. The impact of the story may not always have been so dramatic but, along with Dickens' other Christmas writings, it has had a lasting and significant influence upon our ideas about the Christmas spirit, and about the season as a time for celebration, charity, and memory. A Christmas Carol and Other Christmas Writings by Charles Dickens A Dickens Chronology Introduction Further Reading A Note on the Christmas Festivities The Story Of The Goblins Who Stole A Sexton A Christmas Episode From Master Humphrey’s Clock A Christmas Carol The Haunted Man And The Ghost’s Bargain A Christmas Tree What Christmas Is, As We Grow Older The Seven Poor Travellers Appendix I: Dickens’s Prefaces to Collected Editions of The Christmas BooksAppendix II: Dickens’s Descriptive Headlines for A Christmas Carol and The Haunted ManAp