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The Palliser Novels (1. Can You Forgive…
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The Palliser Novels (1. Can You Forgive Her?, 2. Phineas Finn, 3. The Eustace Diamonds, 4. Phineas Redux, 5. The Prime Minister, 6. The Duke's Children) (edition 1977)

by Anthony Trollope

Series: The Palliser Novels (1-6)

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2342114,710 (4.53)16
In his autobiography, Anthony Trollope called the Palliser Novels--that sprawling epic of Victorian England for which he is justly famous--"the best work of my life," adding "I think Plantagenet Palliser stands more firmly on the ground than any other personage I have created." But as sixteenyears separated the first novel from the last, Trollope worried that readers would be unable to approach them as a whole. "Who will even know that they should be so read?" he complained. Solving this problem in particularly splendid fashion, Oxford is now reissuing the Palliser Novels in anelegantly crafted hard-bound set--with acid-free papers and durable binding--that include the wealth of illustrations that first appeared in the Oxford Illustrated Trollope years ago. Now, a whole new generation of readers can enjoy one of nineteenth-century literature's greatest achievements.While the novels center around the stately politician Plantagenet Palliser, the interest is less in politics than in the lively social scene Trollope creates against a Parliamentary backdrop. His keen eye for the subtleties of character and "great apprehension of the real" impressed contemporarywriters from Nathaniel Hawthorne to Henry James, and in the Palliser Novels we find him at his very best. Between the covers of these books we meet a wonderfully rich variety of men and women, among them Alice Vavasor, whose waverings between suitors--and the resulting mess--prompted Trollope to askCan Your Forgive Her?; the handsome Irish MP Phineas Finn, who grows to maturity as the novels progress; the beautiful enchantress Lizzie Eustace, whose scandalous diamonds are the talk of London high society; Ferdinand Lopez, the unctuous social climber; the elegant and witty Lady Glencora,Plantagenet's wife; and Palliser himself--first as a cabinet aspirant, later as Prime Minister--who is the connecting thread that holds the series together. Along the way we are also introduced to a host of amusing and sharply-drawn characters of less social status who, much like the bumpkins ofShakespeare, offer a distorting yet insightful fun-house mirror to the main action.Nowhere else did Trollope bring to life in such compelling fashion the teeming world of Victorian society and politics, and nowhere else did he create more memorable and living characters than those who populate these six volumes. As a group the Palliser Novels provide us with the most extensiveand telling expose of British life during the period of its greatest prestige.… (more)
Member:flashflood42
Title:The Palliser Novels (1. Can You Forgive Her?, 2. Phineas Finn, 3. The Eustace Diamonds, 4. Phineas Redux, 5. The Prime Minister, 6. The Duke's Children)
Authors:Anthony Trollope
Info:Oxford University Press (1977), Hardcover
Collections:Your library
Rating:*****
Tags:Audio, English Parliamentary Politics, love and marriage, fox hunting

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The Palliser Novels: 6-volume set by Anthony Trollope

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(Original Review, 2002-06-28)

I have some fairly handsome volumes on the shelves in my living room. I mentioned elsewhere that there are about 18 Brittanica "Great Books" mostly philosophy which I have read very little of but there is also some Ancient History which I have. They are quite nice looking (faux, I guess) leather bound, but the effect is rather spoiled by them having numbers on them - I guess so the buyers can tell how many of "the great books" they possess. This does mean that they sort of shout "philistine poser!" at visitors but fortunately, I don't get many.

I got them in a charity shop and I said above that they are handy for reference, but while I do consult them from time to time this is not really true anymore (though it was when I bought them) because they are pretty much all available online free now, often in more digestible translations and more readable format. They are far from useless, however, as I got a bad back recently and had to raise the level of my computer monitor. It is currently sitting on Aquinas vols I and II and Augustine. Most of the rest fall into the handsome but tatty category that I am sure is familiar to many here. Classics or favourites in decent hardback bindings from charity shops etc. I think this display only ever impressed one person. A young lad who was helping the guy who came to do the insulation. He said "you have a lot of books!"

There are about 100 on those shelves, most being upstairs, so this surprised me. But talking to him I found he had only really read one book, The Lord of the Rings which he liked so much he had started collecting different editions of it. I did offer to lend him some other fantasy books but he wouldn't take them. In a way it seemed a pity that he had got into books in such a strange, restricted way. But on the other hand he got his bibliophilic pleasure in his own way so... Anyway, the point is that my faux leather "great books" and tatty charity shop classics have only ever impressed a lad who had only read one book.

But it still counts, right?

Incidentally, there is a wonderful scene in Trollope's 'The Eustace Diamonds' where Lady Eustace is memorising a passage from Queen Mab, and the narrator comments that she hasn't yet learned to choose a passage from later on in a work because you don't get credit for a page further than the one you quote from. At one point, during the height of my passion for reading Anthony Trollope, I was in Paris for a few days and was quite happy to find a bookstore carrying books in English. We went in, but were unable to find any of his books. My wife asked a salesclerk if they had any Trollopes. The man replied, oh yes sir, the Trollopes are at the back. That sent me into fits of laughter, as it did seem appropriate the trollops would be kept at the back. My wife was not amused by it, and didn't see the humour until much later. And the bookstore? It was the Librairie Galignani, which was opened in Paris in 1801 as a bookstore and reading room specialising in works in English.

It's definitely time to re-read The Complete Palliser Novels of Anthony Trollope, I think. Better yet, once you get addicted to Trollope the only cure is to read all 47 novels, which I did. Some of the best are the Macdermots of Ballycloran, Nina Balatka, Marion Fay, the Bertrams, the Vicar of Bullhampton, Dr. Thorne, and John Caldigate. However, my best advice is to just read through the whole Barset-Palliser series in order. Taken as a whole, the series is in my mind the greatest achievement in all Victorian literature. ( )
1 vote antao | Nov 18, 2018 |
Genius. Brilliant. Fantastic. 150 stars. And I still have the TV series to look forward to.

If you enjoyed the Forsyte Saga and Brideshead Revisited as books, you will love this too. ( )
  Petra.Xs | Apr 2, 2013 |
Showing 2 of 2
Character is the whole interest of Trollope and if his portrait of the Prime Minister, the Duke of Omnium, is meant to be a picture of the perfect gentleman and statesman, it is neither idealised nor forced. The Duke’s skin is too thin, he has scruples, he is moody, morose and capable of ducal temper... Phineas is not an outsider, and therefore Trollope is in a better temper. He is the ingenious, penniless, handsome young fellow, going into politics against the author’s affectionate advice, and we are led with him step by step into his career. There are even glances at the Irish Question...

Although Phineas Finn is an amusing guide to Parliamentary life as it then was, it interests us really for things like the famous portraits of the violent red-eyed Lord Chiltern - this plunging , dangerous man would be the hero of a contemporary novel, not a minor character - the superb Mr Kennedy, so gloomy, so evangelical, who adroitly lengthens family prayers when he is jealous ofhis wife’s lover... That is a close study of something not often observed: the neutrality, the nonentity of rich men. And then there are the women of the book who all talk so well and who are very well distinguished from each other. The stress on sex in the modern novel has meant that women have lost their distinctiveness as persons. Trollope excels in making the distinctions clear.
added by SnootyBaronet | editNew York Review of Books, V.S. Pritchett
 

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In his autobiography, Anthony Trollope called the Palliser Novels--that sprawling epic of Victorian England for which he is justly famous--"the best work of my life," adding "I think Plantagenet Palliser stands more firmly on the ground than any other personage I have created." But as sixteenyears separated the first novel from the last, Trollope worried that readers would be unable to approach them as a whole. "Who will even know that they should be so read?" he complained. Solving this problem in particularly splendid fashion, Oxford is now reissuing the Palliser Novels in anelegantly crafted hard-bound set--with acid-free papers and durable binding--that include the wealth of illustrations that first appeared in the Oxford Illustrated Trollope years ago. Now, a whole new generation of readers can enjoy one of nineteenth-century literature's greatest achievements.While the novels center around the stately politician Plantagenet Palliser, the interest is less in politics than in the lively social scene Trollope creates against a Parliamentary backdrop. His keen eye for the subtleties of character and "great apprehension of the real" impressed contemporarywriters from Nathaniel Hawthorne to Henry James, and in the Palliser Novels we find him at his very best. Between the covers of these books we meet a wonderfully rich variety of men and women, among them Alice Vavasor, whose waverings between suitors--and the resulting mess--prompted Trollope to askCan Your Forgive Her?; the handsome Irish MP Phineas Finn, who grows to maturity as the novels progress; the beautiful enchantress Lizzie Eustace, whose scandalous diamonds are the talk of London high society; Ferdinand Lopez, the unctuous social climber; the elegant and witty Lady Glencora,Plantagenet's wife; and Palliser himself--first as a cabinet aspirant, later as Prime Minister--who is the connecting thread that holds the series together. Along the way we are also introduced to a host of amusing and sharply-drawn characters of less social status who, much like the bumpkins ofShakespeare, offer a distorting yet insightful fun-house mirror to the main action.Nowhere else did Trollope bring to life in such compelling fashion the teeming world of Victorian society and politics, and nowhere else did he create more memorable and living characters than those who populate these six volumes. As a group the Palliser Novels provide us with the most extensiveand telling expose of British life during the period of its greatest prestige.

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