The Way We Live Now Audiobook By Anthony Trollope cover art

The Way We Live Now

Parts 1 & 2

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The Way We Live Now

By: Anthony Trollope
Narrated by: Flo Gibson
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About this listen

Everyone thinks Augustus Melmotte, a new arrival in London, is a wealthy financier - until he is caught in a forgery scheme.

This is a satirical look at immorality and dishonesty as Trollope saw them in the worlds of business, politics, journalism, literature, and society on his return from the colonies in 1872. Scoundrels, coquettes, swindlers, and intriguers abound in this novel, which is often called his masterpiece.

Public Domain (P)1995 Audio Book Contractors, Inc.
Classics Genre Fiction Literary Fiction Witty

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)
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This is my favorite of all the Trollope novels, but I'm sad to say that this is the only download I have ever had from Audible that has quality problems. The recording is flawed, or perhaps the cassette tape was worn, about 2/3 of the way through part 1, and this keeps happening. Flo Gibson's voice does take a bit of getting used to. Choose the other Audible version of this wonderful novel, in which we see our own times reflected so well.

Quality problems mar the production!

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I love Trollope, and I think this is his very best book. Great characters and a very dramatic plot. I'd highly recommend the book to anyone who likes Victorian novels or anyone who wants a little historical perspective on our current financial crisis. The main character would have fit in real well in the Wall Street of today. At times I absolutely loved Flo Gibson's narration. She was especially good in doing the various dialects for some of the minor characters. She did a good job of differentiating among the different characters' voices. But sometimes there was a kind of singsong quality that was quite distracting. However, as the book went on, I think she got more into the book, and I didn't find her style as distracting.

Great book, uneven narrator

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This was my first Trollope novel, and I enjoyed it entirely. The sound quality is a bit uneven, but the lively characters and the masterly commentary make this both entertaining and profitable reading. It is satire; you are meant to chuckle or shake your head over these characters rather than identify closely with them. Still, there are lessons to be learned from many of them.

Contrary to an earlier reviewer's comment, I think it is clearly wrong based on this novel to state that Trollope was anti-semitic. Certain of the characters display very sharp, almost absurd anti-semitic views. Yet it is the Jewish banker, Mr. Breghert, who is one of the nobler characters in the story. You should also be prepared for the anti-American views expressed by many of the English characters in the story. Here again, however, one of the nobler and most interesting characters in the novel is the American, Mrs. Hurtle.

Trollope is one of the Greats!

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This is an average to good story. I'm not with those who would call this Trollope's best. Most of the characters I found extremely unlikable, in large part because even the "good" ones were annoying in that they certainly could have used a little more spine.
But the real difficulty for me was the narrator's voice and reading cadence, which was VERY annoying and unenjoyable.

Good story, terrible narrator

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Good social satire but, as in other Trollope novels, the beginning of episodes as they must have been originally published are often evident and can be very repetitve summations of previous "installments." Because this was my main listen over a couple of weeks, I found the novel at times tedious, but at other times very comic and, well, "Trollope." So - if you are looking for a 19th century social satire to listen to in bits and pieces, here and there, this might be enjoyable; but as a "long listen," the novel seemed to me flawed. (It contains excellent Trollope passages, though, so I can't seem to rate below four stars.)

Flo Gibson is not a favorite narrator of mine, and she read this one at even more of a gallop than usual -- but this somehow suited the novel's tone and helped ease the more tedious passages. As other reviews point out, Trollope expresses the contemporary antisemitism, but I also wonder if in THIS novel he is not also satirizing his society's anti-semitism along with classism? I'm not sure ---This is where print pages are useful in examining and referring back to the tone and attitude of passages.

best in small chunks

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The Way We Live Now is my favorite Trollope work and Trollope has written many a wonderful book. But this particular work stands high, not merely as a work of Trollope's, but as something unique in literature. Non-stop-entertaining is this timeless tale of out-size egotistical ambition. What a story! I never stop being amazed at Trollope's almost casual style. No matter how big and complex he can convey us effortlessly and delightfully through all the tortuous machinations of multitudinous characters. His touch is light and clever and fresh, yet he spans the panoply of human motives and emotions, as he relates a fully-colored and complex story. And no one is better at fleshing out genuine, living people, running the gamut of personalities; Lady Carbury who hopes to achieve a little notoriety (and cash) through novel-writing, her long-suffering daughter, Hetta, her appallingly selfish son, Felix, her elderly swain, newsman Mr. Braun; the fabulous con-man Melmont, plus an entourage of clods, critics, cynics, sycophants and swindlers; all contrived with humor, wit and depth. I have read (listened to) The Way We Live Now many times; it is so vivid as to be almost cinematic; I see the action and the characters in their outrageous glory each time I listen to it.

One of the greatest

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There is simply nothing like this novel for its modest, truthful, loving, and poetic view of human activity. It is wonderfully read by Flo Gibson, and the audiobook is absorbing from beginning to end.

One caveat, though, like many British writers of his time, Trollope has clearly anti-semitic views. Not as vile or extreme as Shakespeare or Dickens, but the implicit and casual anti-semitism might be unacceptable for some readers. I am jewish and I can deal with it, but I can imagine others finding it intolerable.

The best

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Audio quality is substandard and reader's voice is annoying.

Great story, poor audio

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What would have made The Way We Live Now better?

I could not understand much of what the narrator was saying. I quit after 7 chapters and downloaded a different version.

What could Anthony Trollope have done to make this a more enjoyable book for you?

The book is probably fine. I need to listen to a different narrator.

How could the performance have been better?

The narrator goes too fast and has too much variety in her loudness. I could not understand most of it, and could not hear some.

Could not finish

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This is my first Trollope novel and I enjoyed it about as much as a George Eliot novel but not as much as a Charles Dickens.

Flo Gibson is a very good narrator but she read with a peculiar rhythm which I found distracting. Also, the quality of the recording was a disappointment, with the volume fluctuating and the voice frequently sounding muffled. I have noticed this flaw with other Flo Gibson recordings (eg. Mill on the Floss).

Audio Quality Disappoints

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