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The String of Pearls (1846–47) charts the macabre career of Sweeney Todd, the Fleet Street barber who drops clients through a trapdoor to supply Mrs. Lovett's famous pies. Cast as a penny dreadful, the tale moves by cliff-hanging installments, interweaving Johanna Oakley's search for her lover with Colonel Jeffery's pursuit of a sailor bearing a necklace of pearls. Its urban Gothic mixes grotesque comedy with anxieties about anonymity, appetite, and the commodification of bodies, in scenes of tunnels, madhouses, and hidden ovens. Rymer, one of Edward Lloyd's industrious hands, excelled in serials such as Varney the Vampire for a burgeoning working-class readership. His feel for London's alleys and trades, amid a market attuned to crime broadsides and food-adulteration scares, shapes the book's texture. Writing within a collaborative press culture that blurred authorship, he channels topical fears into a Gothic economy of meat, money, and mechanized labor. This is indispensable for students of Victorian print culture, Gothic fiction, and the genealogy of urban horror, including later theatrical incarnations of Sweeney Todd. Read it for its breathless pacing and for its satiric intelligence about consumption, law, and social invisibility. As lurid entertainment and cultural diagnosis, it rewards close reading and discussion.
Quickie Classics summarizes timeless works with precision, preserving the author's voice and keeping the prose clear, fast, and readable—distilled, never diluted. Enriched Edition extras: Introduction · Synopsis · Historical Context · Brief Analysis · 4 Reflection Q&As · Editorial Footnotes.