This concise and lucid study provides an ideal introduction to the major
work of Henry Fielding for all students. Fielding's stature as a great
comic novelist is assured, but as Professor Varey illustrates, he was a
remarkably versatile writer. In his day Fielding was one of England's
leading dramatists and also pursued a career in law. He founded, edited,
and contributed essays for four different periodicals, and wrote a
political-satirical novel Jonathan Wild, in addition to a work of
powerful social protest Amelia and his two outstanding contributions to
the development of English prose fiction: Tom Jones and Joseph Andrews.
Professor Varey clarifies and explains this varied body of writing,
concentrating on Fielding's technique of combining opposites or
apparently ill-matched elements - of language, character, narrative
made, and even philosophical thought.