Phineas Finn the Irish Member
Anthony Trollope
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
Phineas Finn is the sequel to “Can you Forgive Her?” and the second novel in Trollope’s Palliser series. The eponymous hero is a young Irishman who becomes a member of the English parliament. Trollope aspired to become an M.P. himself, and he ably describes the workings of the English political scene. There is also a love interest, as the somewhat inconstant Phineas courts three different women: his Irish sweetheart, Mary Flood Jones; Lady Laura Standish, the daughter of a prominent Whig politician; and a lovely heiress, Violet Effingham. (Summary by Karen Merline)
This is the second of Trollope’s six “Palliser” novels. LibriVox recordings of other novels in the series are available:
1-Can You Forgive Her?
2-Phineas Finn
3-The Eustace Diamonds
4-Phineas Redux
5-The Prime Minister
6-The Duke’s Children (27 hr 1 min)
Chapters
Reviews
Ann
A Trolloping good time. Some great readers, some grating, but all in all a pleasure.
arwei
This wonderful book was read beautifully by all readers!
Reviewing the readers more than the book e e
Unknown
Why do so many readers read like there’s a comma after every five words? This always drives me to either use Siri to read the book online or just read it in an EPUB app. Clarity can be accomplished without being so pedantic.
PHINEAS PHOOL!!
Avid Listener
Great tale. Ttrollope was obviously a patient writer
A LibriVox Listener
ka another grat book by Trollope. thanku readersm
Fab Series, Author and Readers A1
JulietV
POLITICAL STORY
A LibriVox Listener
The reader Andy should not put herself forward as a reader. She partly mumbles does not articulate clearly, let’s her voice drop , and has a strong accent not easy to follow. Unfortunately she reads the last chapter. Had to skip it in irritation A pity. Good political story. Beautifully read by most.
Clementi
Great novel. shame about the reading, particularly first chapters, the reader of which reads like an automaton giving no sense to any of the words and rendering it very difficult to listen to. Worth getting an audible offer for this book as it's worth being read decently.