"Hard Times" belongs to the second half of Dickens's writing career, in which his work becomes rather more somber and, by common critical assent, more mature and satisfying. Personally, I prefer his earlier work and his very first novel, "Pickwick Papers", is to my mind his greatest. Surprisingly, "Hard Times", despite its title and reputation, contains some brilliant flashes of Dickens humour, especially in the earlier part. The descriptions of Bounderby and Gradgrind, and the early dialogue with the circus folk, are genuinely hilarious.
This is Dickens's shortest novel, about a third of the length of each of his previous four. Themes, subplots and characters are introduced without being fully explored. The author was perhaps feeling the constraints of writing in installments for a periodical, although he was well used to doing that. This relative brevity, together with the youth of some of the central characters, make this book a good introduction to Dickens for young readers.
There are the large dollops of Victorian melodrama and the reliance on unlikely coincidences that mar much of Dickens's work. Also the usual tendency for characters to become caricatures and to have names that are a little too apt (a teacher called Mr. McChoakumchild?).
The respected critic F.R. Leavis considered "Hard Times" to be Dickens's masterpiece and "only serious work of art".
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Our review: I approached this one with some trepidation because the novel seemed for ever spoiled by a student teacher that spent two months dictating notes about the book which was on our A' Level syllabus. The title just brings memories of an aching hand and subdued anger at inflicting such a terrible teacher on us. But leaving all of that aside, this is a wonderful novel & Martin Jarvis is a wonderful reader.