"This provocative study demands readers willing to widen their expectations for 'poetry.'...The organization is topical, and Trembling provides fresh explanations of the theme of stunted growth, techniques of opening chapters, and the emergence of new urban types. Summing Up: Recommended." - S. A. Parker, CHOICE"Dickens' Novels as Poetry reads as a scintillating conversation with a scholar markedly attuned to the peculiar rhythms and unconscious tics that distinguish the Dickens canon. The analysis is dense, sharp, and demanding, and by the end of the book I feel as though, by some brilliant trick, I have just re-read all the novels in the space of two-hundred pages, and with a newly re-ordered attention to their poetics of dissolution." - Leslie S. Simon, Utah Valley University, Dickens Quarterly"Powerful insights detonate on almost every page of this book...I expect to re-visit individual chapters systematically, just before or after re-reading the novels in question. In other words, Tambling assists and inspires further engagement with the primary material." - Dominic Rainsford, Aarhus University, Dickens Quarterly