
Phineas Finn
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Narrado por:
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Robert Whitfield
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De:
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Anthony Trollope
Phineas Finn is an Irish M.P.A. climbing the political ladder, largely through the assistance of his string of lovers. The questions he is forced to ask himself about honesty, independence, and parliamentary democracy are questions still asked today.
Phineas Finn is the second of Anthony Trollope's six Palliser novels. While each is a story within itself, together the volumes comprise a large, coherent composition that captures the fashions, slang, manners, and politics of two decades. Beginning with this segment of the Palliser novels, Trollope painted an unrivaled portrait of Parliamentary political society in the high Victorian period. Trollope's understanding of the institutions of mid-Victorian England and the unobtrusive irony which informs his sympathetic vision of human fallibility is a hallmark of these stories.
©2012 Anthony Trollope (P)2020 Blackstone PublishingListeners also enjoyed...




















Reseñas de la Crítica
"This gracefully written work is perfectly read by Whitfield, who successfully evokes the Victorian era." (Booklist)
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Fabulous
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If you could sum up Phineas Finn in three words, what would they be?
This is one of the best Palliser novels.What did you like best about this story?
(spoiler) Madame Max is one of Trollope's best characters, and one of his most modern women in a sea of bland victorian heroines, like that tedious blank slate poor Finny marries.What three words best describe Robert Whitfield’s performance?
Everything was fine, crisp, clear and lovely, until he started voicing Lady Glencora Palliser. Then it became obvious that he hasn't read the other books, because he makes her sound snobbish and 40 years old, when she is probably only in her twenties, and every book shows her to be wonderfully undignified and a little outrageous. Hard to take if you have seen Susan Hampshire's dead on and utterly charming performance in the BBC Palliser series.Pretty Good
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Phineas Finn liked women and women liked him. His philosophy could be best stated in the words of that 60's song,"If you can't be with the one you love, then love the one you're with". Restated: maybe a woman, in particular one Miss Mary Flood Jones, the girl back home, out of sight is a woman out of mind. Mr. Finn was a man of flexible principles and attachments. Clever, quick witted and handsome, he was scamp. I like him. He was a happy scamp, even a well meaning scamp. There were no mean bones in his body.
If you like inside politics, this is the book. He was a shooting star, flashing across the night sky suddenly appearing to be remarked upon then as suddenly gone. Elected to parliament without opposition at age twenty-five, the naive young man quickly finds himself at the center of political maneuvers and schemes. Then, suddenly, it was over but there is still the matter of the girl back home.
A Political Scamp
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The occasional "recaps" of plot betray that the novel originally appeared as a serial, and I found that bit annoying.
If you're new to Trollope, I'd recommend that you start with one of the Barset Chronicles rather than Phinneas.
not a good first
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Good classic stuff
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*Spoiler alert from this point on.*
The novel itself is enjoyable, very funny sometimes, but really very slight. I wanted to like it;I was actually named for a character in a Trollope novel, believe it or not. But I came to feel that the hero's character is not the best drawn one in the book. That would be Violet, who is merely the third most important character. When Phineas chooses a wife, I had no sympathy with his "noble" decision at all, since he takes the one-dimensional girl back home. There's an episodic quality similar to dramatic television, with stuff just happening to fill pages, and the end coming just because it's time for the book to end. I'll note that in the sequel Phineas Redux Trollope kills off the dull wife on page 3 and brings Finn back to London for another go-around.
Best Reader I've ever heard--So-so story
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Trollope's treatment of women was, as usual, sensitive to their powerlessness in British society and their need to take great care in everything they did so as not to sully their reputation and ruin their lives. A very tough world for women!
For the first time ever, I must criticize the narration. Usually this narrator handles accents expertly (how he keeps 30+ Dickens characters distinct is a miracle!) but I was disappointed in his narration of the Scottish and Irish accents. Not up to his usual standards. This was recorded 15 years ago, however.
Politics, values, and love vie for our attention
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Excellent
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