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Reviews for Sir Harry Hotspur of Humblethwaite

 Sir Harry Hotspur of Humblethwaite magazine reviews

The average rating for Sir Harry Hotspur of Humblethwaite based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2020-01-10 00:00:00
2010was given a rating of 5 stars Peter Jennings
This book was slow to hook me, but once it did, I could hardly bear to do anything but read it. Trollope has a way of building a whole world with a single room where you can imagine where the furniture is placed and what the rest of the house, of the houses, look like. And with his characters, they are so real that you can imagine how they walk, talk and live life even when you aren't there as a non-active participant, more than just a reader with a book. To read Trollope is to become immersed in a world that if not your own, you are at least involved in as if you were present. My previous favourite Trollope was Barchester Towers, which was very much of the tradition of Gaskell's Cranford and Jane Austen's minutae of the upper middle classes - the period in which most costume dramas are set. Sir Harry Hotspur is a very different kind of book. Despite it's length, it is populated with very few characters, but delves deep into their minds and motives. It is also the only one of Trollope's books, of novels in general, where everything does not work out in the end. The book has a psychological depth that was also evident in Barchester Towers but is not generally a mark of the work of Trollope whose depth lies more in social commentary, but that together with the wonderful writing elevates it to one of my favourite classic novels of all time. Review 5/2020. Book read in 2011.
Review # 2 was written on 2017-01-20 00:00:00
2010was given a rating of 3 stars Lee Gandolfi
If you've read every Austen book and finished off Gaskell as well, if you've watched up all of Downton Abbey and polished off Upstairs, Downstairs too, and yet you still want more uptight British aristocracy drama from the Victorian/Edwardian era, Sir Harry Hotspur Of Humblethwaite by Anthony Trollope is just what you're looking for! This book is all about the social mores of the times, mid 19th century rural England. Watching these characters act and live by these intricate and sometimes convoluted rules of behavior can be frustrating for the modern reader. In this respect, Trollope excels himself, exceeding all expectation for a trying read indeed! If you've read Sense and Sensibility, the plot of Sir Harry Hotspur Of Humblethwaite will feel very similar to that of the Marianne Dashwood storyline. The good girl wants the bad boy and there's nothing that can be said by her rational, thoughtful friends to dissuade her, because they are rational and thoughtful, thus too cold to understand true love. Kids will be kids, as the saying goes. You can lead a girl to Colonel Brandon, but she'll drink up Willoughby until she bursts! None of the above truly mars this novel. What makes this a less-than-stellar read is the author's fourth wall breaking and use of exposition in place of storytelling: Dear reader, let me tell you about the feelings of these characters rather than showing you. Again, different eras, differing tastes. I'm not saying Trollope couldn't do it, but he didn't...for the most part. Don't get me wrong, there are some quality dramatic scenes that play out in a satisfying way, which save the book from being an utter drudge read. However, this was not a pleasure. It was mostly mechanical and dull in many places, while the ending is rushed and melodramatic. I could still recommend this to those who REALLY go in for the Austen/Downton kind of thing, but only them.


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