Bibliography
Recommend a title for bookclub
Click on a title to buy it, read other users' comments or to post your own comment:
- The Warden, 1855
- Barchester Towers, 1857
- The Three Clerks, 1858
- Can You Forgive Her?, 1864
- The Small House at Allington, 1864
- He Knew He Was Right, 1869
- Phineas Finn, 1869
- The Eustace Diamonds, 1872
- The Way We Live Now, 1875
- Phineas Redux, 1876
- The Prime Minister, 1876
- The American Senator, 1877
- Ayala's Angel, 1880
- Marion Fay, 1882
A Good Place To Start
| Title | Votes | |
|---|---|---|
| Barchester Towers | 1 | |
| The Way We Live Now | 1 | |
| The Eustace Diamonds | 1 | |
| The Warden | 1 |
A Bad Place To Start
| Title | Votes | |
|---|---|---|
| Barchester Towers | 1 |
Genres
Categorization is odious. There is tremendous overlap among genres. These pigeonholes are offered only as a convenience.
Anthony Trollope
added by editor
Comments
Please consider recommending where to begin reading this author, or where not to. A few words about your experiences reading this author and why you make the recommendations you do will be helpful to other users. If you are the author or have studied this author extensively, please say so.
Trollope is such an amazing writer. You certainly want to start right, because you will miss a lot if you don't. There are quite a few wrong places to start. The Barchester novels have never appealed to me at all (surely a matter of taste, as people do love them). I don't think you can go wrong with the Palliser novels. The first one is "Can You Forgive Her?" Chronologically, that's a sensible place to start--but I think "Phineas Finn" and "The Eustace Diamonds," which come later in the series, are better books. Perhaps one should sidestep the whole series question and start with "The Way We Live Now," a really masterful novel. For my money, Trollope's women are a hundred times more interesting than the women in Dickens. His ideas of a woman's place are--well, outmoded, at the least--but his understanding of the socioeconomic pressures on women in his time is superb. He also writes with amazing persuasiveness about how people accumulate power in government--read "Phineas Finn" for that. Terrific writer, don't miss him.
vitawallace January 27th, 2006 10:08 PM PST
I love Trollope, too. Many of his books explore difficult moral questions or choices in depth, yet they are easy to read and delightful in tone and texture.
hanmeng February 5th, 2006 10:37 AM PST
I started with the first of the Barchester novels, and have kept on going. (My being unreligous was no obstacle to enjoying them). Most recently I read The Way We Live Now, and found it to be my least favorite.
joecowley May 27th, 2007 12:42 PM PST
I, too, am a Trollope fan. I especially enjoyed the Palliser novels. I accidentally started with The Eustace Diamonds and was hooked. No need to read them in order if you don't mind going back and forth in time, with some characters major in some of the novels, and minor in others. Reading Trollope is like eating peanuts; one doesn't know when to stop, until the whole of the canon is empty. Joseph Cowley
Biography
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FROM: biography.ms (http:/anthony-trollope.biography.ms)
Anthony Trollope (April 24, 1815 - December 6, 1882) became one of the most successful and respected English novelists of the Victorian era. His popularity continues into the present day (some famous fans being Alec Guinness, who never traveled without a Trollope novel, and ex-Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, John Major); however, his reputation amongst literary critics fluctuates markedly, for reasons explained below.
Biography
Related Links
* Anthony Trollope quotes
Trollope was born in London, England as the son of a barrister and the successful travel writer Frances Trollope . He was educated at various public schools until his family moved to Belgium. Trollope's experiences at these schools were very miserable; at the age of twelve he fantasised about suicide. However, he took to daydreaming instead, constructing elaborate inner worlds.
Following his father's death, Trollope's mother, Frances, had to continue writing to make ends meet. Trollope himself obtained a job in the Post Office in 1834, and was sent to work in Ireland in 1841. On the numerous long train trips Trollope had to take to carry out his Post Office duties, he began writing, and set very firm goals about how much he would write per day, earning Trollope the title of being one of the most prolific writers of his time. He wrote his earliest novels while working as a Post man, occasionally dipping into the 'lost-letter' box for ideas (it is significant that many of his earliest novels have Ireland as their setting ? natural enough given his background, but not likely to lead to a warm critical reception given the contemporary English attitudes towards Ireland). During the period of his employment as a Post Office official, Trollope is credited with having introduced the pillar box (a bright red mail box) in the United Kingdom.
After leaving the service and failing in a bid for election to Parliament, Trollope became a full-time writer, working as editor of the St Paul's Magazine. Through this magazine he published several of his novels. His first major success came with The Warden (1855) ? the first in the series of six novels set in the mythical county of "Barsetshire" (often referred to as the Chronicles of Barsetshire). The best-known of these is probably the comic masterpiece, Barchester Towers (1857).
Trollope's other major sequence of novels deals with politics, mainly in the shape of Plantagenet Palliser (although, like the Barsetshire series, many other characters feature in each novel). Also noteworthy are Cousin Henry and Dr. Wortle's School, both probing psychological and moral studies in the vein of The Warden, and a sweeping satire, The Way We Live Now.
By the time of his death, Trollope had completed approximately four dozen novels, as well as dozens of short stories and a few books on travel.
Anthony Trollope died in 1882 and was interred in Kensal Green Cemetery, London, England, where Wilkie Collins is also buried.
C. P. Snow wrote a biography of Trollope, published in 1975, titled Trollope: His Life and Art.
Reputation
After his death, Trollope's Autobiography appeared. It was largely this volume that led to Trollope's downfall with the critics. Even during his writing career, reviewers of his books tended increasingly to shake their heads over his prodigious output (and the same went for Dickens), but when Trollope revealed that he actually adhered to a definite schedule, he confirmed his critics' worst fears. The Muse, in their view, might just possibly be immensely prolific; but she would never work on schedule. (Interestingly, no-one has decried Gustave Flaubert for diligence, though he too worked on a schedule-scheme similar to Trollope's.) Worse, Trollope admitted that he wrote for money and called the disdain of money false and foolish. The Muse should not be aware of money.
Henry James drove the final nail into the coffin of Trollope's reputation. The young James wrote some scathing reviews of Trollope's novels (The Belton Estate, for instance, he called "a stupid book, without a single thought or idea in it ... a sort of mental pablum"). He also made it clear that he despised Trollope's narrative method; a real novel, in James's view, should maintain "the fiction of fiction", and never talk as if the made-up characters actually were made up. Nor would the reliable narrator have appealed to James's tastes. As trends in the world of the novel moved increasingly towards subjectivity, James's views and, more importantly, modern ideas on the novel in general, assured that Trollope would remain obscure for decades. In the forties some attempts were made to resurrect Trollope; he enjoyed a brief critical Renaissance in the sixties; and again in the nineties. Critics today are particularly interested in Trollope's portrayal of women ? which caused remark even in his own day for its remarkable insight and sensitivity to the inner conflicts caused by the constrained position of women in Victorian society. But the understanding that critics find largely in Trollope's portrayal of women, readers find in Trollope's portrayals of human beings in general. Trollope's sales amongst readers have never waned.
A Trollope Society flourishes in the UK.
Trollope on television
The British Broadcasting Corporation has made several television drama serials based on the works of Anthony Trollope:
The Pallisers , a 26-episode adaptation of all six Palliser novels, first broadcast in 1974. Adapted by Simon Raven; starred Philip Latham as Plantagenet Palliser.
The Barchester Chronicles, an eight-episode adaptation of the first two Barset novels, The Warden and Barchester Towers. Adapted by Alan Plater; starred Donald Pleasance as the Reverend Septimus Harding, Nigel Hawthorne as Archdeacon Grantly, and Alan Rickman as the Reverend Obadiah Slope.
The Way We Live Now, a four-episode adaptation of the novel of the same name. Adapted by Andrew Davies; starred David Suchet as Auguste Melmotte and Matthew MacFadyen as Sir Felix Carbury.
All three have been shown in the United States on PBS; The Pallisers in its own right, and The Barchester Chronicles and The Way We Live Now as part of Masterpiece Theatre.
A dramatization of He Knew He Was Right in four 60-minute episodes began on April 18 2004 on BBC One. It was produced by BBC Wales, and starred, amongst others, Bill Nighy and Geoffrey Palmer.
Trollope on radio
The BBC commissioned a four part radio adaptation of The Small House at Allington, the fifth novel of the Chronicles of Barsetshire, which was broadcast in 1993. The response of listeners was so positive that adaptations of the five remaining novels of the series were commissioned and the complete series broadcast on BBC Radio 4 between December 1995 and March 1998. In this adaptation, the part of Archdeacon Grantley was played by Stephen Moore.
The Pallisers, a new 12-part adaptation of the Pallisers novels, was broadcast on Radio 4 from January to April 2004, in the weekend Classic Serial slot.
Works
Barsetshire series
* The Warden (1855)
* Barchester Towers (1857)
* Doctor Thorne (1858)
* Framley Parsonage (1861)
* The Small House at Allington (1864)
* The Last Chronicle of Barset (1867)
Pallisers series
* Can You Forgive Her? (1864)
* Phineas Finn (1869)
* The Eustace Diamonds (1873)
* Phineas Redux (1874)
* The Prime Minister (1876)
* The Duke's Children (1879)
other
* The Macdermots of Ballycloran (1847)
* The Kellys and the O'Kellys (1848)
* La Vendee (1850)
* The Three Clerks (1858)
* The West Indies and the Spanish Main (1859)
* The Bertrams (1859)
* Castle Richmond (1860)
* Tales of All Countries--1st Series (1861)
* Tales of All Countries--2nd Series (1863)
* Tales of All Countries--3rd Series (1870)
* Orley Farm (1862)
* North America (1862)
* Rachel Ray (1863)
* Miss Mackenzie (1865)
* The Belton Estate (1866)
* The Claverings (1867)
* Nina Balatka (1867)
* Linda Tressel (1868)
* He Knew He Was Right (1869)
* Brown, Jones, and Robinson (1870)
* The Vicar of Bullhampton (1870)
* An Editor's Tales (1870)
* Caesar (Ancient Classics) (1870)
* Sir Harry Hotspur of Humblethwaite (1871)
* Ralph the Heir (1871)
* The Golden Lion of Granpere (1872)
* Australia and New Zealand (1873)
* Harry Heathcote of Gangoil (1874)
* Lady Anna (1874)
* The Way We Live Now , (1875)
* The American Senator (1877)
* Is He Popenjoy? (1878)
* South Africa (1878)
* John Caldigate (1879)
* An Eye for an Eye (1879)
* Cousin Henry (1879)
* Thackeray (1879)
* Life of Cicero (1880)
* Ayala's Angel (1881)
* Doctor Wortle's School (1881)
* Frau Frohmann and other Stories (1882)
* Lord Palmerston (1882)
* The Fixed Period (1882)
* Kept in the Dark (1882)
* Marion Fay (1882)
* Mr. Scarborough's Family (1883)
Quotations
"Of all novelists in any country, Trollope best understands the role of money. Compared with him even Balzac is a romantic." W. H. Auden

bookbug January 27th, 2006 04:38 PM PST