Almost everything you're familiar with was first mentioned in an authorised biography written
by Dickens' close friend John Forster 150 years ago. It's the version of events that Dickens
himself chose to make public and newly accessible archives reveal that it's crammed with gaps
inconsistencies and outright lies. There's the sister whose existence Dickens kept secret and
the Jewish relations whose faith he strove to conceal. There's plagiarism fraud and suicide.
And that's only for starters. Helena Kelly author of the acclaimed Jane Austen the Secret
Radical retells Dickens' story from his childhood to his deathbed uncovers the truths he
tried to keep hidden and offers a fresh - and deeply troubling - perspective on the man who
remains one of Britain's best-known novelists. You won't be able to look at him - or his work
- in the same way again.