A Christmas Carol is a novel written by the English writer Charles Dickens and published in 1843.
Charles Dickens, the most popular writer of the Victorian age, was born near Portsmouth, England, in 1812 and died in Kent in 1870. When his father was thrown into debtors’ prison, young Charles was taken out of school and forced to work in a shoe-polish factory, which may help explain the presence of so many abandoned and victimized children in his novels. As a young man he worked as a reporter before starting his career as a fiction writer in 1833. In his novels, short stories and essays, Dickens combined hilarious comedy with a scathing criticism of the inhuman features of Victorian industrial society. Many of his novels, such as Great Expectations, David Copperfield and Oliver Twist, have been made into films.
A Christmas Carol is the story of Mr. Scrooge, an elderly miser who doesn’t believe in Christmas. On Christmas Eve, four ghosts teach him that love and friendship are much more important than amassing a fortune. The first ghost is that of Marley, his former business partner, who warns him about the suffering awaiting him if he does not change. The three other ghosts reveal to Scrooge scenes from his past, present and future. After witnessing these scenes, Scrooge is a changed man.
Visit this website and read an adaptation of chapter 5 of A Christmas Carol and do the activities at the bottom.
If you want, you can also read the complete novel here.
Although A Christmas Carol was written a long time ago, it has been once and again versioned for TV, cinema, opera and other media. Here you have all the adaptations of the work for all the media. One of the latest versions of the novel is the 2009 film A Christmas Carol, directed by Robert Zemeckis and starred by Jim Carrey. You can watch the trailer here.