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'Trollope did not write for posterity,' observed Henry James. 'He wrote for the day, the moment; but these are just the writers whom posterity is apt to put into its pocket.' Considered by contemporary critics to be Trollope's greatest novel, The Way We Live Now is a satire of the literary world of London in the 1870s and a bold indictment of the new power of speculative finance in English life. 'I was instigated by what I conceived to be the commercial profligacy of the age,' Trollope said.
His story concerns Augustus Melmotte, a French swindler and scoundrel, and his daughter, to whom Felix Carbury, adored son of the authoress Lady Carbury, is induced to propose marriage for the sake of securing a fortune. Trollope knew well the difficulties of dealing with editors, publishers, reviewers, and the public; his portrait of Lady Carbury, impetuous, unprincipled, and unswervingly devoted to her own self-promotion, is one of his finest satirical achievements.
His picture of late-nineteenth-century England is a portrait of a society on the verge of moral bankruptcy. In The Way We Live Now Trollope combines his talents as a portraitist and his skills as a storyteller to give us life as it was lived more than a hundred years ago.
注:两个封面随机采购
ANTHONY TROLLOPE, the quintessential Victorian novelist whose dozens of books illuminate virtually every aspect of late nineteenth century E ngland, was born in Russell Square, London, on April 24, 1815. He was the son of Thomas Anthony Trollope, a failed barrister. His mother, Frances Trollope, successfully turned to writing in order to improve their finances.
As a charity day student at Harrow School Trollope was shunned by boarders. Later as a student at Winchester College he was often flogged his older brother Tom. At the age of nineteen Trollope embarked on a career as a civil servant in London's General Post Office. In 1841 he was transferred to Ireland, where he lived happily for the next eighteen years, advancing steadily through the ranks of the postal service. In 1844 he married Rose Heseltine, who became a trusted literary assistant once he began to write.
The Macdermots of Ballycloran, Trollope's first book, was published in 1847. But it was not until 1855 that he achieved commercial success with The Warden, the initial volume in six-book series about clerical life in and around the fictional cathedral town of Barchester. Two sequels, Barchester Towers (1857) and Doctor Thorne (1858), quickly ensured his fame. The West Indies and the Spanish Main, the first of several travelogues Trollope recorded while journeying abroad on postal business, appeared in October 1859. The same year he returned to England and took up residence at Waltham House in Hertfordshire, some twelve miles from London. There Trollope settled into a disciplined routine that enabled his phenomenal productivity. He rose every morning at five o'clock and wrote for three to four hours in order to meet a self-imposed weekly quota of approximately forty pages; moreover he frequently began a new book the very day he completed one. The novelist's only passionate diversion was foxhunting.
Trollope quickly became part of London's literary life. His work began to appear serially in Cornhill Magazine, and he formed a great friendship with its editor, William Thackeray. He finished the last three volumes in the Barsetshire series--Framley Parsonage (1861), The Small House at Allington (1864), and The Last Chronicle of Barset (1867). Meanwhile, he launched the Palliser novels, a new series about politics, with Can You Forgive Her? (1865). At the time, Nathaniel Hawthorne perfectly pinpointed the secret of the Englishman--s appeal: 'The novels of Anthony Trollope [are] just as real as if some giant had hewn a great lump out of the earth and put it under a glass case, with all its inhabitants going about their daily business, and not suspecting that they were being made a show of. These books are just as English as a beef-steak . . . but still I should think that human nature would give them success anywhere.'
Trollope resigned from the postal service late in 1867, to become editor of Saint Paul's Magazine. The next year he made an unsuccessful bid for a seat in Parliament. In 1871 Trollope relinquished Waltham House and embarked on a two-year trip to Australia, New Zealand, and the United States. Upon returning to London he settled at 39 Montagu Square and soon published the engaging travel book Australia and New Zealand (1873). In later novels Trollope shifted his interest from scenes of provincial life to satires of English politics and society--among them The Claverings (1867), He Knew He Was Right (1869), The Way We Live Now (1875), and The American Senator (1877). The five remaining Palliser novels--Phineas Finn (1869), The Eustace Diamonds (1873), Phineas Redux (1874), The Prime Minister (1876), and The Duke's Children (1880)--also focused on political and social themes.
In the final years of his life Trollope traveled extensively. He journeyed to Ceylon and South Africa, and revisited both Ireland and Australia. He also turned out two biographies, Thackeray (1879) and The Life of Cicero (1880), and began writing his memoirs. Anthony Trollope died on December 6, 1882, a month after suffering a paralyzing stroke. The author's self-portrait, An Autobiography, appeared the following year. 'Trollope will remain one of the most trustworthy . . . of the writers who have helped the heart of man to know itself,' judged Henry James. 'His great, his inestimable merit was a complete appreciation of the usual.'
小时候,最喜欢听别人讲故事。(第一句话就是谎言,因为小时候并没有人给我讲故事。父母忙于生计,所以自己多半时候都待在外婆的家里。老太太倒是十分宠我,却总摆不脱现实生活中的吃喝拉撒。) 第一篇印象深刻的故事还是上幼儿园的时候,老师讲给我的。(第二句话又在撒谎,明...
评分【本文为特罗洛普《如今世道》的英文版导读】 1872年12月,特罗洛普在澳大利亚殖民地和新西兰度过了忙碌的十八个月后,途经旧金山、盐湖城和纽约回到了英格兰。旅途和繁忙并没有妨碍他进行写作,有关这些偏远地方的书“差不多也都完成了”。在流亡国外的几个月期...
评分【本文为特罗洛普《如今世道》的英文版导读】 1872年12月,特罗洛普在澳大利亚殖民地和新西兰度过了忙碌的十八个月后,途经旧金山、盐湖城和纽约回到了英格兰。旅途和繁忙并没有妨碍他进行写作,有关这些偏远地方的书“差不多也都完成了”。在流亡国外的几个月期...
评分小时候,最喜欢听别人讲故事。(第一句话就是谎言,因为小时候并没有人给我讲故事。父母忙于生计,所以自己多半时候都待在外婆的家里。老太太倒是十分宠我,却总摆不脱现实生活中的吃喝拉撒。) 第一篇印象深刻的故事还是上幼儿园的时候,老师讲给我的。(第二句话又在撒谎,明...
评分小时候,最喜欢听别人讲故事。(第一句话就是谎言,因为小时候并没有人给我讲故事。父母忙于生计,所以自己多半时候都待在外婆的家里。老太太倒是十分宠我,却总摆不脱现实生活中的吃喝拉撒。) 第一篇印象深刻的故事还是上幼儿园的时候,老师讲给我的。(第二句话又在撒谎,明...
读完这本书,我感觉像是经历了一场漫长而疲惫的社交季,那种精疲力尽的感觉久久不能散去。作者的叙事节奏处理得非常高明,时而疾风骤雨般地推进情节,将人物推向绝境;时而又慢得像老式留声机的转动,让人在冗长却富有张力的场景中,品味那些未说出口的怨怼和嫉妒。最让我印象深刻的是对“名声”这个概念的解构。它不再是声誉的积累,而是一种可以随时被制造、被购买、被销毁的商品。书中一些配角的命运转折,简直是现代公关危机的教科书式演示——如何在一夜之间从万人拥戴变成万人唾弃。我尤其欣赏作者对于不同阶层人物心理描写的层次感,无论是底层那些试图抓住最后一根稻草的投机者,还是上层那些早已习惯于将他人的痛苦视为背景噪音的精英,他们的动机都被描绘得复杂而真实,没有脸谱化的好人或坏蛋,只有在特定环境下被扭曲的人性。
评分这是一部令人心神不宁的作品,它以一种近乎残酷的诚实,撕开了我们这个时代光鲜外表下的腐朽与焦虑。作者的笔触极其细腻,仿佛手术刀般精准地剖析着现代社会中人与人之间那种岌岌可危的依赖与疏离。我花了很长时间才从阅读带来的那种持续的压迫感中缓过神来。它不是那种读完会让你感觉轻松愉快的书,恰恰相反,它像一面镜子,映照出我们集体潜意识中对“成功”二字的病态追逐,以及随之而来的道德滑坡。那些光鲜亮丽的角色,他们为了维护自己精心构建的幻象,不惜采取一切手段,他们的对话充满了虚伪的客套和暗藏的算计,每一个停顿、每一个眼神的闪躲,都被作者捕捉得丝丝入扣。特别是关于金融泡沫和媒体操纵那几段描写,读起来让人脊背发凉,因为你清晰地知道,这并非虚构,而是对现实生活的一种夸张的、但又无比贴切的映射。这本书没有提供任何简单的答案或安慰,它只是冷峻地陈述着一种事实:在如今这个速度至上的世界里,真正的价值和真诚的情感,正在以惊人的速度贬值。
评分这是一部格局宏大,却又无比贴近个体神经末梢的作品。它的力量不在于讲述一个惊天动地的阴谋,而在于描绘出环境对人性潜移默化的、几乎不可逆转的侵蚀。作者对细节的把握令人惊叹,无论是对商业谈判桌上微妙的权力转移,还是对家庭内部因财务压力导致的冷漠,都处理得入木三分。我特别欣赏作者处理时间线的方式,它时常在当下、回忆与对未来的恐惧之间快速切换,这种破碎感完美地模拟了现代人碎片化的注意力与焦虑感。这本书的结局,与其说是一个结束,不如说是一个循环的再次开始,它暗示着这场追逐永无止境,而我们都只是其中的棋子。读完后,我感觉对那些光环背后的人生,有了一种更深层次的、带着敬畏的理解——并非羡慕,而是对那种消耗战的警惕。
评分这本书读起来有一种奇特的“沉浸式体验”,仿佛我不是在阅读文字,而是直接被拉入那个充斥着香槟气泡和紧张气氛的社交场域。语言的运用上,作者简直是一位魔术师,他能够用最平实的词汇,构建出最令人不安的画面感。比如描述一次奢华晚宴的场景,我们能闻到昂贵香水的味道,听到高跟鞋敲击大理石地板的清脆声,但同时,字里行间又弥漫着一种即将火山爆发的寂静。我注意到作者在处理几条平行的故事线时,手法相当娴熟,它们看似各自独立,却在某种看不见的张力下相互牵引,直到最后的交汇点,那种宿命感让人叹为观止。它探讨了金钱对人际关系的腐蚀作用,但着墨点不在于“拥有财富”,而在于“追逐财富”的过程本身对灵魂的消耗。阅读过程中,我多次放下书本,陷入沉思,反思自己生活中那些为了追求“更好”而放弃“真实”的瞬间。
评分我必须承认,这本书的阅读门槛不低,它要求读者具备一定的耐心和对社会结构变迁的敏感度。它不是一部让你轻松消磨时间的娱乐小说,更像是一份对当代资本主义精神状态的深度诊断报告,只不过是用小说体裁包装起来的。作者没有使用任何廉价的煽情手法,他的冷静甚至有些令人毛骨悚然,这使得书中的悲剧更具震撼力。关于“连接”与“孤独”的对立,是贯穿全书的主题之一。每个人都通过无数的屏幕、电话、邀请函紧密相连,但内核却是前所未有的孤立。我特别欣赏其中关于“形象管理”的段落,作者精确地指出了我们是如何主动地将自己塑造成一个别人期望看到的“产品”,并最终被自己的产品定义。这种自我异化的过程,被描绘得既可悲又可笑,充满了黑色幽默的底色。
评分现实主义。
评分拖着不想写论文的日子里开始啃几本大部头小说
评分2019读完的第一本英文小说,每天早晨读半小时(也不是每天早晨啦,周末都在偷懒),也可以督促自己早点起床。继续…
评分2019读完的第一本英文小说,每天早晨读半小时(也不是每天早晨啦,周末都在偷懒),也可以督促自己早点起床。继续…
评分BBC audiobook read by Timothy West
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