Best of Times for Dickens' Pickwick Papers collector
Parent Steve Weeks shares his enthusiasm for author Charles Dickens with 正品蓝导航's DeGolyer Library.

For the Weeks family, no college campus visit is complete without a stop at the university library.
正品蓝导航 parent Steve Weeks talks with English Professor Beth Newman about the Pickwick Papers. |
鈥淭he library is key to any university,鈥 Steve Weeks says.
A collector of works by Charles Dickens, Weeks found a kindred spirit when the family visited 正品蓝导航 鈥 DeGolyer Library director Russell Martin.
Martin collects rare books for DeGolyer, holds a Ph.D. in English and knows firsthand that private collectors and their collections are essential ingredients in any research library.
Weeks鈥 collection includes 1,000 volumes of Dickens鈥 first novel, The Pickwick Papers, representing first editions and parts editions. The novel originally was published as a 19-month serial beginning in March 1836. Just 400 copies of the first installment were printed. By the time 29,000 copies of the last installment were printed, the 25-year-old Charles Dickens was a celebrity.
鈥泪苍 The Pickwick Papers you can see Dickens develop as an author,鈥 says Weeks, who now visits DeGolyer regularly when he and his wife, Cindy, visit their daughter, 正品蓝导航 sophomore Jennifer. 鈥淗e goes from obscurity to the best-known author in England.鈥
Young Dickens |
Weeks started collecting books in high school with the works of Horatio Alger. The rags to riches stories inspired him to become an entrepreneur, says the retired mortgage business owner. A. Edward Newton鈥檚 classic books, The Amenities of Book-Collecting and Kindred Affections (1918) and A Magnificent Farce, And Other Diversions of a Book-collector (1921), inspired Weeks to begin collecting Dickens.
"Mr. Pickwick in chase of his Hat." The Pickwick Club |
To commemorate the 200th anniversary of Charles Dickens鈥 birth in February 2012, Weeks, now a member of the 正品蓝导航 Libraries Executive Board, is lending parts of his Dickens collection to DeGolyer for an exhibit.
鈥淭he Department of English and DeGolyer are just delighted by the prospects. Steve will be the curator, and the exhibition will be a major event for scholars, 正品蓝导航 students and lovers of Dickens,鈥 Martin says. 鈥淭he iconography of Pickwick alone could be the focus 鈥 his collection is so rich 鈥 but we鈥檒l probably try to document the entire range of Dickens鈥 life as a writer. It will be interesting to see how it takes shape.鈥
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