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A novel about class, money, and the Victorian marriage market.


Doctor Thorne

Originally published in 1858, 557 pages. Available for free on Project Gutenberg.



Anthony Trollope once said, "A novel should give a picture of common life enlivened by humour and sweetened by pathos." Trollope admirably fulfills his own criteria in this charming third novel in the Chronicles of Barsetshire.

Doctor Thorne adopts his niece Mary, keeping secret her illegitimate birth as he introduces her to the best local social circles. There she meets and falls in love with Frank Gresham - the heir to a vastly mortgaged estate and obliged to find a wealthy wife. Only Doctor Thorne knows that Mary is to inherit a large legacy that will make her acceptable to the otherwise disapproving middle-class society to which Frank belongs. Where fiery passion fails, understated English virtues of patience, persistence, and good humor prevail in this most appealing of Trollope's comedies.


Not quite a comedy of manners, but lighter than Trollope's other work. )

Also by Anthony Trollope: My reviews of Can You Forgive Her? and The Way We Live Now.




My complete list of book reviews.
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Pure Victorian soap opera. Boy could Trollope write, and I'm talking about volume.

Can You Forgive Her?

Published 1864, Approximately 317,000 words. Available for free at Project Gutenberg.


Can You Forgive Her? is the first of the six Palliser novels. Here Trollope examines parliamentary election and marriage, politics and privacy. As he dissects the Victorian upper class, issues and people shed their pretenses under his patient, ironic probe.

Alice Vavasor cannot decide whether to marry her ambitious but violent cousin George or the upright and gentlemanly John Grey—and so finds herself accepting and rejecting each of them in turn. She is increasingly confused about her own feelings and unable to forgive herself for such vacillation—a situation contrasted with that of her friend Lady Glencora, forced by “sagacious heads” to marry the rising politician Plantagenet Palliser in order to prevent her true love, the worthless Burgo Fitzgerald, from wasting her vast fortune. In asking his readers to pardon Alice for her transgression of the Victorian moral code, Trollope created a telling and wide-ranging account of the social world of his day.


Do you like soap operas about whiny, entitled rich people? This book is like getting literary credit for enjoying Falcon Crest. )

Verdict: A long Victorian social drama, played straight without satire or comedy, so perhaps not to everyone's taste, but if the premise itself doesn't bore you, the novel won't either. Trollope is eminently readable, and thoroughly plumbs his characters and their marriages. If you're not already a Trollope fan, though, this is not the book I'd start with.

Also by Anthony Trollope: My review of The Way We Live Now.
inverarity: (Default)
Pure Victorian soap opera. Boy could Trollope write, and I'm talking about volume.

Can You Forgive Her?

Published 1864, Approximately 317,000 words. Available for free at Project Gutenberg.


Can You Forgive Her? is the first of the six Palliser novels. Here Trollope examines parliamentary election and marriage, politics and privacy. As he dissects the Victorian upper class, issues and people shed their pretenses under his patient, ironic probe.

Alice Vavasor cannot decide whether to marry her ambitious but violent cousin George or the upright and gentlemanly John Grey—and so finds herself accepting and rejecting each of them in turn. She is increasingly confused about her own feelings and unable to forgive herself for such vacillation—a situation contrasted with that of her friend Lady Glencora, forced by “sagacious heads” to marry the rising politician Plantagenet Palliser in order to prevent her true love, the worthless Burgo Fitzgerald, from wasting her vast fortune. In asking his readers to pardon Alice for her transgression of the Victorian moral code, Trollope created a telling and wide-ranging account of the social world of his day.


Do you like soap operas about whiny, entitled rich people? This book is like getting literary credit for enjoying Falcon Crest. )

Verdict: A long Victorian social drama, played straight without satire or comedy, so perhaps not to everyone's taste, but if the premise itself doesn't bore you, the novel won't either. Trollope is eminently readable, and thoroughly plumbs his characters and their marriages. If you're not already a Trollope fan, though, this is not the book I'd start with.

Also by Anthony Trollope: My review of The Way We Live Now.
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One-line summary: A grand Victorian melodrama with all of Austen's cynical wit and Sinclair's scathing social critique.



Originally published in 1875. Approximately 353,000 words (800 pages). Available for free at Project Gutenberg.


In this world of bribes and vendettas, swindling and suicide, in which heiresses are won like gambling stakes, Trollope's characters embody all the vices: Lady Carbury, a 43-year-old coquette, 'false from head to foot'; her son Felix, with the 'instincts of a horse, not approaching the higher sympathies of a dog'; and Melmotte, the colossal figure who dominates the book, a 'horrid, big, rich scoundrel...a bloated swindler...a vile city ruffian'.


Scheming adventurers, femme fatales, dissolute young wastrels, greedy class-consciousness, and the Victorian marriage market, all swirling around a railway stock ponzi scheme that will not be unfamiliar to modern readers. )

Verdict: Anthony Trollope's been added to my "Need to read more of this author" list. Like Dickens, he is only considered "literary" a hundred years later -- he was writing the mass market paperbacks of his day. Anyone who likes Victorian novels should read The Way We Live Now, especially if you like biting social commentary. Trollope takes shots at everyone from the clergy to Parliament, and while he's at it gets a few digs in on literary critics as well. It's not really a romance, but there are plenty of romantic subplots. It's funnier than you'd expect, and enormously entertaining -- despite the wordiness and some barely-relevant chapters, it never dragged for me.

ObPlug: The Way We Live Now is apparently considered by many to be Trollope's best work, but it's not on the 1001 books list. Four other Trollope novels are, though, so if you'd like to see reviews (or possibly write them yourself), please join us at [livejournal.com profile] books1001!

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