Buy this book
Charles Dickens wrote A Christmas Carol in 1843 and the first edition, published on 19th December, was so successful that it sold out in just six days. The publishers had to produce two further editions between Christmas and the new year to meet the demand, and the novella has never been out of print.
A Christmas Carol tells the story of a greedy money-lender, Ebeneezer Scrooge, who is first visited by the ghost of his former business partner and then by three spirits—the Ghost of Christmas Past, the Ghost of Christmas Present and the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come. They show Scrooge’s lack of compassion to him, compelling him to act more compassionately in the future and to honor Christmas in his heart.
Buy this book
Previews available in: English Dutch German Finnish French
Subjects
People
Places
Times
Showing 29 featured editions. View all 3198 editions?
| Edition | Availability |
|---|---|
| 01 |
eeee
|
| 02 |
bbbb
|
| 03 |
bbbb
|
| 04 |
bbbb
|
| 05 |
eeee
|
| 06 |
bbbb
|
| 07 |
eeee
|
| 08 |
bbbb
|
| 09 |
bbbb
|
| 10 |
bbbb
|
| 11 |
bbbb
|
| 12 |
bbbb
|
| 13 |
bbbb
|
| 14 |
eeee
|
| 15 |
bbbb
|
| 16 |
bbbb
|
| 17 |
bbbb
|
| 18 |
bbbb
|
| 19 |
bbbb
|
| 20 |
bbbb
|
| 21 |
bbbb
|
| 22 |
bbbb
|
| 23 |
cccc
|
| 24 |
cccc
|
|
25
A Christmas Carol (J & B Dickens Library)
1965-01-01, The Paddington Corporation, New York
in English
|
cccc
|
| 26 |
cccc
|
| 27 |
cccc
|
| 28 |
cccc
|
| 29 |
aaaa
|
Book Details
Edition Identifiers
Work Identifiers
Source records
Work Description
A retelling of the story about a miser whose life is changed by Christmas.
Excerpts
This line represents Scrooge at his most callous. It highlights the Malthusian social theories of the time that Dickens was actively protesting against, making it a crucial quote for the book’s social message.
Links outside Open Library
Community Reviews (1)
Wikipedia citation
×CloseCopy and paste this code into your Wikipedia page. Need help?





























