Stephen Jarvis

Stephen Jarvis’s Followers (14)

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Stephen Jarvis



Average rating: 3.56 · 347 ratings · 111 reviews · 39 distinct worksSimilar authors
Death and Mr. Pickwick

3.54 avg rating — 324 ratings — published 2015 — 11 editions
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The Bizarre Leisure Book: F...

3.75 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 1995
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Walking with Beasts: Survival!

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 3 ratings — published 2001 — 4 editions
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High Performance Computing ...

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liked it 3.00 avg rating — 1 rating
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The Kissing Companion: Secr...

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0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 1999
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The Ultimate Guide to Unusu...

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 1997
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Killers' Haven

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings
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A century of sawdust

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Holographic Time (Temporal ...

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Stability of two-phase annu...

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More books by Stephen Jarvis…
Quotes by Stephen Jarvis  (?)
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“A labourer sat in a gin shop soon after dawn, reading his Pickwick. He was joined by a fishmonger, also with his Pickwick, whose reeking skin would normally drive men to anywhere else, but not now, for a jolly mood bonded the two and they talked of the antics on a Pickwickian page. Then came a man who parked his donkey cart outside, and, having given the beast a nosebag, he sipped gin noisily in between quoting Sam Weller; and then a milkmaid came, who put down her pails, and she too stopped for a gin and a few minutes’ talk of Pickwick.

The surgeon would read Pickwick in a cab on his way to the hospital; the omnibus driver would read Pickwick while the horses were changed; the blacksmith would read Pickwick while waiting for metal in a furnace; the cook would read Pickwick when she was stirring the soup; the mother would read Pickwick when the child was at her breast. In all the unfilled gaps in people’s lives, in all those moments when it was possible for reading to overlap another activity, Pickwick appeared.”
Stephen Jarvis, Death and Mr. Pickwick

“Pickwick was bought by a man who had an earring and by a man with a luxuriant moustache and by a man who catalogued butterflies and by a man who had bought shark’s fins at the wharf to make soup and by a man with a beard who carried a radical newspaper who attended agitated assemblies and by a man in a scruffy coat, who wrote short pieces for magazines and by a man wheeling a barrow of exotic shrubs he would sell at his nursery.

One of these had a brother who was a respectable alderman; the cousin of another was a priest; another played whist with a banker; the buyer of radical literature had a friend in the Whigs; the nurseryman knew a doctor and several lawyers; the man with the moustache had a friend in the senior ranks of the cavalry; the scruffy man knew several editors.

There was also a little middle-aged hawker called Knox, recognizable on the city streets by his plaid jacket, though his pinched cheeks, pointed chin and combed red side whiskers ere never conducive to anonymity.”
Stephen Jarvis, Death and Mr. Pickwick

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