Determined to write a novel
that accurately reflected the squalor and degradation of London’s poorest and
allegedly most criminal neighbourhood, Arthur Morrison spent eighteen months
shadowing Jay and recording the district’s complex social codes. The result was
a novel that raised disturbing questions about the alleged lawlessness of the
slum, the effectiveness of philanthropic interventions in the lives of the poor, the
evidence of moral decay and biological degeneration among the most deprived,
and the proper role of the novelist. Vivid and unsentimental, A Child of the Jago is
a unique portrait of Victorian London.
Buy A Child of the Jago (1896) by Arthur Morrison from Australia's Online Independent Bookstore, BooksDirect.