Difference between revisions of "The Life of our Lord"
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(Honoring Dickens' wishes, this book was not published until 1933 in London. In 1934, the first American edition was published by Simon & Schuster and it became a top bestseller.) |
(this book is fully available online ...) |
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Honoring Dickens' wishes, this book was not published until in [[London]] until after Dickens' last child died in late 1933. In 1934, the first American edition was published by Simon & Schuster and it became a top bestseller. | Honoring Dickens' wishes, this book was not published until in [[London]] until after Dickens' last child died in late 1933. In 1934, the first American edition was published by Simon & Schuster and it became a top bestseller. | ||
| + | == See also == | ||
| + | *[https://archive.org/details/lifeofourlordwri011897mbp/page/n1/mode/2up this book is fully available online here] | ||
[[category:Bible]] | [[category:Bible]] | ||
[[category:books]] | [[category:books]] | ||
[[category:Christianity]] | [[category:Christianity]] | ||
Latest revision as of 18:26, October 24, 2022
The Life of our Lord is a secret book written by Charles Dickens from 1846-1849 in order to teach his children about Jesus, and which he forbade releasing it to the public until after the last of his children had passed away. Dickens was also writing one of his greatest novels, David Copperfield, at the same time.
At 128 pages in length, this book is based on the Gospel of Luke.
Honoring Dickens' wishes, this book was not published until in London until after Dickens' last child died in late 1933. In 1934, the first American edition was published by Simon & Schuster and it became a top bestseller.