When he first began writing, Charles Dickens wrote under the pseudonym of Boz, a childhood name. He soon dropped it for his real name.
Charles Dickens used the pseudonym "Boz" when he first published a series of original description sketches of daily life in London.
I believe Boz, if i am wrong someone can correct..
He used the pseudonym Boz.
Charles Dickens' first book was a collection of stories titled "Sketches by Boz". It was published in 1836 under the pseudonym Boz.
Naoto Oshima did the original sketches.
Yes, Charles Dickens published his early work under the pseudonym Boz. He used this pen name for his first collection of stories, "Sketches by Boz," which was published in 1836.
The first work published by Charles Dickens was a collection of stories called "Sketches by Boz" in 1836. It was a compilation of his early journalistic pieces published under the pseudonym Boz.
Sketches by Boz was published in serial form in various magazines between 1833 and 1836. Reprints followed for several years.
"Sketches by Boz" was written by Charles Dickens and first published in 1836. It is a collection of sketches that originally appeared in various periodicals before being compiled into a single volume.
It began to be serialized in 1836. This was Dickens's first published work.
Tolkien left many sketches and drawings. He even doodled using colored pens during his train rides. The original hardcover versions of The Hobbit were published with his pictures and maps in them, and many of them have been used since then.There is a book, Pictures by JRR Tolkien that contain many of them.
Alfred Sylvester has written: 'Sketches of Toronto' -- subject(s): Description and travel, Buildings, Constructions, Description, Descriptions
Elizabeth Frame has written: 'Descriptive sketches of Nova Scotia in prose and verse' -- subject(s): Descriptions et voyages, Description and travel 'The twilight of faith' 'Descriptive sketches of Nova Scotia' -- subject(s): Description and travel
Robert Benson has written: 'Sketches of Corsica; or, a journal written during a visit to that island, in 1823' 'Sketches of Corsica' -- subject(s): Description and travel
"A Mate Can Do No Wrong" by Henry Lawson was published in 1896 in "While the Billy Boils", which is a collection of his short stories and sketches.