Miss Mackenzie Anthony Trollope 9781522921585 Books
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In mid-19th century England, an era full of celebrated novelists, Anthony Trollope was one of the most popular and critically acclaimed of them all. Even today, his Chronicles of Barsetshire series is widely read, as are his other novels, many of which deal with criticisms of English culture at the time, from its politics to its customs and norms.
Miss Mackenzie Anthony Trollope 9781522921585 Books
I guess the most important thing to say about this novel is that it's very funny! However, the novelist usually manages somehow to convey, as he's depicting people more or less ineptly struggling to live and prosper within the rigid rules and conventions of Victorian society, that he likes and/or has compassion for these poor screw-ups.As for the exemplary characters (here Ms Mackenzie and her friends), Trollope is happy to depict them being exemplary in ways that are extreme, but at the same time he seems aware that in reality such people would almost never be met with, and might well be quite irritating if they were.This latter characteristic of Trollope's novels, and this one in particular, was probably dicatated in part by the fact that the Victorian public wanted only the most virtuous heroes and heroines. The former characteristic of his work, a kind of easy-going, amused tolerance for fools and knaves, may have been the real Trollope. I think he knew that most humans are deeply flawed, and enjoyed depicting such people. In this he reminds me of a novelist from a hundred years earlier, the product of a much less moralistic England—Henry Fielding, author of "Tom Jones."
The bottom line is that this is a novel which starts out to tell the story of a woman almost certainly doomed to be a spinster, and ends with a great deal of delightful suspense as to whether the author can believably rescue her from that fate, while at the same time giving us a view of middle- and upper-class Victorian society that, as in all his novels, always has the ring of truth.
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Tags : Miss Mackenzie [Anthony Trollope] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. <b>In mid-19th century England, an era full of celebrated novelists, Anthony Trollope was one of the most popular and critically acclaimed of them all.</b> Even today,Anthony Trollope,Miss Mackenzie,CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform,1522921583,FICTION Classics
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Miss Mackenzie Anthony Trollope 9781522921585 Books Reviews
Classic Trollope. If you love stories (and studies) of society and its rules in England in the 1800s, this book is perfect. Trollope's deep understanding and portrayal of the Victorian life and its societal banalities and his thorough character studies are entertaining and impressive. Get a bowl of popcorn and nestled in for a delightful escape from the modern world.
ALERT these comments refer to the green cover Miss Mackenzie published by Krill Press. I have given it just two stars because the print is so small as to be almost illegible. Also there are no page numbers, very disappointing. I have since downloaded the copy and I'm sure I will love it as I have the other Trollope books I've read. I had purchased this in order to pass it on after reading it. It will need a magnifying overlay..
I'm currently on a "read everything Trollope wrote" binge...or a million words.
I've just begun reading Miss MacKenzie and, so far, I love it. The characters are being filled out, flaws and all, in a way that appeals very much to this reader. Plots and subplots are beginning to become more clear, making this novel a good read. Trollope's societal and political commentary, as always, makes his work thought provoking and enjoyable.
Quite an interesting look at the difficulties of single women during this time.
The manner in which the people expressed themselves in such a round about way was at times frustrating to read but also appropriate.
The story started with a woman who nursed family members and kept house for them and then good fortune came to her, the way in which she was treated, her reaction and how she made her way through life was a pleasure to read.
While I love the plot and writing, I hate this particular book edition I got because it’s so full of typos as to sometimes be unreadable. I guess they scanned the pages of a worn old edition and transcribed them, but any time the scanner got confused, the words turn into giberish. Of course no one proof-read this before printing. Here is a photo of one particular dialogue. Should I really be paying money for this? I will have to buy a different (hopefully proper older edition) so I can keep reading because I love the story but just can’t stand the shoddy transcription any longer. Also, no pagination. I mean, how did anyone think it would be okay to print this and ask money for it?
The heroine, a hopelessly dull, poor, and not so beautiful spinster, who has spent her thirty-some years mostly nursing invalids, suddenly is told that she is the heiress of her recently deceased brother, the last relative that she nursed. Another brother, who also was once possessed of a fortune, lives with 7 children, a disagreeable wife, and a failing business. Margaret, the pathetic, lonely spinster, feels obligated to somehow help out her brother's family in spite of his obnoxious wife. She decides to take their second daughter, Susana, under her care and provide her with a good education. She also decides to move to Littlebath, a sort of resort town outside of London. She rents a small, attractive house and manages to set up her living situation as becomes her new station in life and register Susana in a fashionable school in the area..
As soon as her new position becomes known, Margaret is besieged with proposals of marriage. She also finds that in Littlebath she has a choice of society. One is to become a member of a church group with a very controlling pastor's wife, Mrs. Stumfold and an obnoxious curate, Mr. Maguire. The other choice is a group confessed to be worldly-minded and devilish that is led by her next door neighbor, Miss Todd. Margaret sticks her toe in each group. She would like to be friends with a Miss Bath, who seems like a lovely person, and although allowed to visit Miss Todd because of a long-standing friendship, Miss Baker is completely under the control of Mrs. Stumfold. Margarel, although quiet and unassuming, refuses to come under this domination.
While at Littlebath, Margaret is visited by a Mr. Samuel Rubb, the son of her brother Thomas's partner in the oilcloth business of Rubb and Mackenzie. Mr. Rubb has come to make a business call to solicit a large loan from Margaret to save the failing business. Margaret readily agrees, although she knows that it is not a wise investment. She determines that if all fails, she will consider the money a gift to her brother. In the middle of all this, she is invited to The Cedars to visit her aunt and uncle, Lord and Lady Ball. Through a mix-up and falling out between two brothers a generation before, the family fortune came to Margaret's two brothers, and although Thomas had squandered his share, William had left his to Margaret, while the title would stay in the Ball family. Lady Ball, a cranky, manipulative woman, was convinced that it was Margaret's duty to marry her son John, a bald widower with nine children, so that the money (what was left of it) and the title could be joined together once again.
Margaret escaped the Ball family and returned once again to her lonely independent life in Littlebath. Before she knew it, she had two more suitors as well as cousin John Ball -- Mr.Rudd continued to call and pressed his suite, and Mr. Maguire realized that with Margaret's money he could become independent of the Stumfolds. As Margaret was considering the pro's and con's of her three suitors, realizing that her money was the goal of all three, but also seeing that marriage to one of them would be a way to escape from her boring, lonely life. As she was considering which of the three would be the least offensive to her personally to marry, she received an urgent call to the bedside of her brother Thomas. As Thomas' illness was terminal, she established herself as his nurse, and on his deathbed promised to divide what was left of her money with the frantic and still obnoxious Mrs. Thomas Mackenzie.
Thus, I have set up the story for you. Who will Margaret choose? What will her future life be? The three suitors continue to besiege her even at the Thomas Mackenzie home, and she begins to see that the fulfillment of her life could be in nursing, an occupation that had occupied her since her early years. She is also besieged by Mrs. Thomas, Sarah, who wants the settlement of the funds Margaret has promised to her husband. She wants to know what will become of her 6 remaining children, (Margaret has taken charge of Susana.) and the Balls want to know what will become of John Ball's 9. Mr. Maguire has fought with Mrs. Stumfold and resigned from the Littlebath church. He desperately needs Margaret's money to set himself up as vicar of a competing church in Littlebath. Mr. Rudd is also desperate to marry. Margaret's loan to the business seemingly did not save it. What will happen? Read the book to find out.
I guess the most important thing to say about this novel is that it's very funny! However, the novelist usually manages somehow to convey, as he's depicting people more or less ineptly struggling to live and prosper within the rigid rules and conventions of Victorian society, that he likes and/or has compassion for these poor screw-ups.
As for the exemplary characters (here Ms Mackenzie and her friends), Trollope is happy to depict them being exemplary in ways that are extreme, but at the same time he seems aware that in reality such people would almost never be met with, and might well be quite irritating if they were.This latter characteristic of Trollope's novels, and this one in particular, was probably dicatated in part by the fact that the Victorian public wanted only the most virtuous heroes and heroines. The former characteristic of his work, a kind of easy-going, amused tolerance for fools and knaves, may have been the real Trollope. I think he knew that most humans are deeply flawed, and enjoyed depicting such people. In this he reminds me of a novelist from a hundred years earlier, the product of a much less moralistic England—Henry Fielding, author of "Tom Jones."
The bottom line is that this is a novel which starts out to tell the story of a woman almost certainly doomed to be a spinster, and ends with a great deal of delightful suspense as to whether the author can believably rescue her from that fate, while at the same time giving us a view of middle- and upper-class Victorian society that, as in all his novels, always has the ring of truth.
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