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The Small House at Allington

Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers

(4,505 Sterne; 94 Bewertungen)

Fifth novel in the Barsetshire series, The Small House at Allington is largely focused on the Small House's inhabitants, Mrs. Dale and her two marriageable daughters, Lily and Bell. The two girls, of course, have suitors: their cousin, Bernard Dale, his friend Adolphus Crosbie, and the local boy, Johnny Eames, whose career in London is to mark him as far more than the "hobbledehoy" that he has earlier been considered. Crosbie is a social climber, and his connection with the dysfunctional de Courcys of Barsetshire give the author a chance for a splendid portrayal of an aristocratic family in decline. As with many of AT's novels, there are subplots as well, and many pictures of rural life standing in contrast to that of London. Some critics have seen in the portrayal of Johnny Eames something of an autobiographical exercise on Trollope's part. (Summary by Nicholas Clifford)

Novels in the series are:
1-The Warden
1-The Warden(version 2)
2-Barchester Towers
3-Doctor Thorne
4-Framley Parsonage
5-The Small House at Allington
6-The Last Chronicle of Barset (25 hr 15 min)

Chapters

01 - The Squire of Allington

21:54

Read by Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)

02 -The Two Pearls of Allington

29:02

Read by Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)

03 - The Widow Dale of Allington

25:01

Read by Simon Evers

04 - Mrs Roper's Boarding-House

23:48

Read by Simon Evers

05 - About L. D

18:17

Read by doublemirrors

06 - Beautiful Days

30:31

Read by Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)

07 - The Beginning of Troubles

29:39

Read by Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)

08 - It Cannot Be

18:54

Read by Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)

09 - Mrs Dale's Little Party

34:36

Read by Thelma Meyer

10 - Mrs Lupex and Amelia Roper

20:09

Read by Simon Evers

11 - Social Life

16:48

Read by Simon Evers

12 - Lilian Dale Becomes a Butterfly

38:10

Read by Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)

13 - A Visit to Guestwick

24:47

Read by Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)

14 - John Eames Takes a Walk

16:32

Read by Simon Evers

15 - The Last Day

27:53

Read by Simon Evers

16 - Mr Crosbie Meets an Old Clergyman on His Way to Courcy Castle

14:43

Read by Simon Evers

17 - Courcy Castle

36:37

Read by Alexandra Huckabay

18 - Lily Dale's First Love-Letter

21:10

Read by Alexandra Huckabay

19 - The Squire Makes a Visit to the Small House

22:21

Read by Alexandra Huckabay

20 - Dr Crofts

20:04

Read by Lee Ann Howlett

21 - John Eames Encounters Two Adventures, and Displays Great Courage in Both

32:07

Read by Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)

22 - Lord De Guest at Home

21:04

Read by Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)

23 - Mr Plantagenet Palliser

45:02

Read by Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)

24 - A Mother-in-Law and a Father-in-Law

13:43

Read by Lee Ann Howlett

25 - Adolphus Crosbie Spends an Evening at His Club

23:19

Read by Alexandra Huckabay

26 - Lord de Courcy in the Bosom of His Family

21:35

Read by Alexandra Huckabay

27 - 'On My Honour, I Do Not Understand It'

31:37

Read by Kirsten Wever

28 - The Board

25:20

Read by Simon Evers

29 - John Eames Returns to Burton Crescent

20:10

Read by Simon Evers

30 - 'Is It from Him?'

25:44

Read by Simon Evers

31 - The Wounded Fawn

28:44

Read by Brendan Stallard

32 - Pawkins's in Jermyn Street

22:26

Read by Shirleyroses

33 - 'The Time Will Come'

26:19

Read by Shirleyroses

34 - The Combat

21:39

Read by Felicity C

35 - Væ Victis

32:35

Read by Felicity C

36 - 'See, the Conquering Hero Comes'

31:26

Read by Felicity C

37 - An Old Man's Complaint

18:49

Read by Piper Hayes

38 - Doctor Crofts Is Called In

29:38

Read by Piper Hayes

39 - Doctor Crofts Is Turned Out

29:22

Read by Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)

40 - Preparations for the Wedding

36:01

Read by Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)

41 - Domestic Troubles

20:21

Read by Lee Ann Howlett

42 - Lily's Bedside

20:31

Read by Alexandra Huckabay

43 - Fie, Fie!

27:54

Read by Alexandra Huckabay

44 - Valentine's Day at Allington

19:43

Read by Alexandra Huckabay

45 - Valentine's Day in London

29:08

Read by Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)

46 - John Eames at his Office

29:26

Read by Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)

47 - The New Private Secretary

18:30

Read by Phineas Redux

48 - Nemesis

26:04

Read by Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)

49 - Preparations for Going

25:03

Read by Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)

50 - Mrs Dale Is Thankful for a Good Thing

18:12

Read by Alexandra Huckabay

51 - John Eames Does Things Which He Ought Not to Have Done

30:15

Read by Alexandra Huckabay

52 - The First Visit to the Guestwick Bridge

24:51

Read by Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)

53 - Loquitur Hopkins

21:52

Read by Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)

54 - The Second Visit to the Guestwick Bridge

27:36

Read by Sharon Omi

55 - Not Very Fie Fie after All

33:29

Read by alwpoe

56 - Showing How Mr Crosbie Became Again a Happy Man

19:09

Read by Simon Evers

57 - Lilian Dale Vanquishes Her Mother

24:08

Read by Piper Hayes

58 - The Fate of the Small House

23:32

Read by Piper Hayes

59 - John Eames Becomes a Man

23:22

Read by Simon Evers

60 - Conclusion

24:19

Read by Simon Evers

Bewertungen

Stubborn people hurt each other for 700 pages

(4,5 Sterne)

I was unaware of this novel and surprised by how difficult the characters were. I found Lily profoundly annoying. I didn't expect to end up liking the squire more than most of the rest of the characters, but everyone else was SO confusingly stupid. Mrs Dale really doesn't come off well. Despite the difficult circumstances she is in, she is an ineffective parent, indulgent, and every bit as stubborn and foolish as her daughters, allowing them their way when she ought to be acting like an adult and guiding them. Lily is the perfect picture of a girl who longs for an abusive selfish man over a normal relationship. The Earl and John Eames are interesting characters whose growing friendship was very enjoyable. Most of the readers were excellent.

(4,5 Sterne)

Perhaps it is not fair to review this book after listening to just one chapter. But I am coming to Trollope after a gap of over 25 years. And the reader makes the whole experience quite delightful. Trollope has such an attractive style, the way he describes things (so vivid!), the underlying current of humor, the flashes of sarcasm, the smooth flow of language. We are in the presence of a master novelist, whose literary genius needs to be appreciated a bit more by our literary critics. Well, have listened to 3 chapters so far. And things are 'so far, so good'.

A look at the low life

(4 Sterne)

For me, the most interesting parts of this book took place in Mrs Roper's seedy London boarding house, where the low-life struggles and quarrels seemed the most realistic. The main story largely repeats the theme of quite a few books by Trollope and Dickens, in which an eccentric old wealthy patron provides a dowry enabling a nice but impoverished couple to marry and live happily ever after. Great atmosphere and penetrating humour.

well-read, but not a pleasing story

(4 Sterne)

I'm a big fan of Trollope, but not of this book. It was, dare I say, emotionally unhealthy. The reader is drawn into a loathing, almost masochistic intrigue of Crosbey. Then there's Johnny Eames, who makes you want to slap him until he grows up. But it is engaging, well-written and well-read.

Portraits of Real Choices

(4 Sterne)

Mr. Trollope sometimes gives us the fairy tale ending and sometimes does not. I'm fascinated at some characters naivety. I found myself chastising certain ones as they moved into unwise areas or abdicated their responsibilities where it was decidedly needed.

(5 Sterne)

ah! perfect Trollope with rascally gorgeous women and handsome men who pursue titles and wealth ending up sunk in a living hell, while poor but honest girls get their peaceful happy home in the end. Some of the very best readers around

outstanding

(5 Sterne)

A more Henry James-like Trollope. very interesting characterizations, and a story that illustrates Oscar Wilde's aphorism, there are two tragedies in life: one is not getting what you want, the other is getting it. uniforms excellent readers.

Ending Not Quite as Predictable

(5 Sterne)

Nice installment of the series - no big surprises just a good tale about the lives of the gentry of old