Doctor Thorne Audiobook By Anthony Trollope cover art

Doctor Thorne

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Doctor Thorne

By: Anthony Trollope
Narrated by: Simon Vance
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About this listen

Anthony Trollope once said, "A novel should give a picture of common life enlivened by humour and sweetened by pathos." Trollope admirably fulfills his own criteria in this charming third novel in the Chronicles of Barsetshire.

Doctor Thorne adopts his niece Mary, keeping secret her illegitimate birth as he introduces her to the best local social circles. There she meets and falls in love with Frank Gresham - the heir to a vastly mortgaged estate and obliged to find a wealthy wife. Only Doctor Thorne knows that Mary is to inherit a large legacy that will make her acceptable to the otherwise disapproving middle-class society to which Frank belongs. Where fiery passion fails, understated English virtues of patience, persistence, and good humor prevail in this most appealing of Trollope's comedies.

(P)2007 Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Classics Genre Fiction Literary Fiction Witty
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Critic reviews

"One of the great English Victorian novelists....A sharp but sympathetic observer of Victorian social and political life." (Daniel S. Burt, The Biography Book)

Engaging Story • Witty Characters • Gentle Humor • Insightful Observations
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This book had my undivided attention for days- and that is unusual for me. Could not stop reading because the characters were so developed I felt as though I was always in the room with them. Sly humor and innuendo, so characteristic of Trollop is in full force. The narration was superb, too.

Captivating

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Simon Vance reads the humour between the lines of Trollope's classics in a way that keeps me wanting more. Many threads come together in this 3rd volume, and many also begin here. The rich smorgasbord of characters also offer a great listen, and re-listen.

Delicious listening.

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So funny, intelligent and modern. Listetening to it a second time just for the pleasure of listening to the narrator. What a joy this was.

Work of a comic genius!

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Absolutely fell in love with every character in this story, actually every aspect of the story

Truly loved this novel

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…Trollope has few peers, and although the theme is dated, the personalities, plot and machinations are not. But, again, it is the prose and the eloquence of diction that delivers both humor and pathos with such elegance that makes this a masterpiece!

As a Titan of the Written Word…!

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If you like Trollope at all, you like it all. Simon Vance does an excellent job of narrating this gently satiric tale of English country life in the Victorian era. Yes, the story is slow-moving by modern standards, but it offers a pleasant vacation from the pace of twenty-first century life.

The main conflict occurs within Dr. Thorne himself. Can he maintain his integrity in the face of conflicting responsibilities? This isn’t an irrelevant question for any of us.

But it does all work out very well in the end.

It All Works Out In The End

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It makes the people who know me laugh at me but I look forward to my 90 minute commute every day because I get to spend time with my latest 'audible' book and no demands from anyone else. This has been especially true for my readings of Trollope's Barsetshire novels, especially 'Doctor Thorne'. I find these wonderful narrations an escape from stress and care and I am grateful for their re-recordings. These new, fresh versions have excellent sound quality and a truly outstanding reader in Simon Vance. For those who savor 19th century English novels, nothing can beat a few hours with Anthony Trollope and Simon Vance. By the time I get home I'm a pleasure to be near again (or at least that's what I like to think).

An Unabridged Pleasure!

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Would you recommend this audiobook to a friend? If so, why?

Yes, if they like an acerbic version of an English romance

What other book might you compare Doctor Thorne to and why?

Any Jane Austn, because of the funny class descriptions threading through a serious romance

Have you listened to any of Simon Vance’s other performances before? How does this one compare?

Yes and he is terrific in this. He does the women's voices very well.

Funny social commentary on Victorian England

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Thoroughly enjoyed this entry in the Chronicles of Barsetshire. A romance reminiscent of Oscar Wilde, with an interesting cast of characters, gentle humor, and not heavy-handed with the moral platitudes like some Victorian literature.

Victorian Romance

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I agree with a previous reviewer about the value of good 19th century lit as balm for stress! At the same time, this novel presents an interesting portrait of the perception of alcoholism in its day. Trollope seems to highlight a Victorian vice in each movel in he series - that said, all the novels are a comfortable read if your life is too complicated for the angst of contempory lit and you look for prose/characters more substantial than pulp. Although we know there are few real people as sterling as Mary or Dr Thorne, somehow reading about them renews my faith in the potential of human nature.

<i>Dr Thorne</i> and <i>Barchester Towers</i> seem to me the best of the <i>Barsetshire Chronicles</i>, and Thorne especially can be read as a stand alone novel.

interesting similarities of detail between <i>Dr Thorne</i>and Gaskell's <i>Wives and Daughters </i>(published later)--- I think Gaskell was a friend /protege of Dickens, and I think Trollope takes a few minor snipes at Dickens' sometimes ham-fistedness in earlier books of the Barsetshire series, so there may be layers of like trivia to uncover as you listen

balm for the soul

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