
The Last Chronicle of Barset
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Narrated by:
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Simon Vance
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By:
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Anthony Trollope
This last novel in the Chronicles of Barsetshire series involves Mr. Crawley, the impoverished curate of Hogglestock, who is accused of theft when he uses a large check to pay off his debts. The scandal fiercely divides the citizens of Barsetshire and threatens to tear apart Mr. Crawley's family.
Listen to the classics: download more titles in Anthony Trollope's Barsetshire series.©1867 Public Domain (P)2007 Blackstone Audio, Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...




















I feel Valerie’s pain; I’ve done the same thing with other series. But you don’t have to. The most satisfying way to experience the Last Chronicle is to start with the first chronicle—the Warden—and then to work your way through the intervening four novels. “Work” is a misleading word, because it implies, well…work. Instead, these books are a sheer pleasure, all the more so because of Simon Vance’s flawless performances. And that pleasure increases exponentially if, by the time you reach this volume, you know Septimus Harding’s backstory, how the good Doctor Thorne ended up where he is now, or the history of the war between Archdeacon Grantly and Barchester’s bishop (and his wife, the real power behind the episcopal throne).
As long as I started by quoting a fellow reviewer, I think I’ll continue; Joseph and Valerie and Charles bring up points I wanted to make, expressing them as well, if not better than I could:
“Trollope is a crafty writer, giving all the appearance of just dashing off whatever he ‘remembers’ about the incidents of the current tale while all the time weaving together a very satisfying and well-constructed narrative that feels as much like reality as you could like.” –Joseph, South Bend, IN
“…it was very enjoyable and made me laugh out loud, even though there were a few characters needing a whack upside the head...” –Valerie, Heath, OH
“I cannot recommend this book highly enough, except that one suffers withdrawal symptoms after finishing it!” -Charles
I especially endorse this last observation.
If, like me, you’re daunted by a massive cast of characters and a web of familial relations, the Trollope Society has a handy rundown of everything. Unfortunately, while these lists are more complete than Wikidepia’s, like Wikipedia they give away the plot, describing characters not just by their relationship to each other—what I need to be reminded of every now and then—but also who they marry, if they die and when, etc. Still, if you need them, they’re there.
The only thing I’d add is what I’ve said in other reviews of Trollope. He has a refreshingly candid view of the characters he creates. John Eames, for example, while an estimable young man, has his weaknesses and is a hero, if indeed he is a hero, only by chance. Doctor Thorne, though probably the most gifted—or at least human—physician in Barsetshire, is no genius on the brink of a groundbreaking medical discovery. And Adolphus Crosbie, though far weaker and more self-centered than John Eames, is no supervillain. It all adds to that feeling of reality, of life as we actually live it day-to-day, that Joseph was talking about.
Don’t Make the Last Chronicle Your First Listen
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Bye Bye Barchester
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Trollope's observations of a Victorian Cleric
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Memes
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So sad to see this one end
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Finale to a wonderful series
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Top shelf
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Brilliant narration
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Brilliant narration
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Long anticipated great pleasure, superb reader
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