General Fiction
437
The Claverings is the best wrought of the novels designed for The Cornhill, and as surely conceived as any book he ever wrote." — Sadleir.
«It is a novel of atmosphere, and the atmosphere is of that sort very dangerous for the English novelist, the atmosphere captured so supremely well by Thackeray the green-lighted, close-scented gambling rooms, the shabby adventures of half-deserted spas, the shelving beaches of foreign watering-places, concealed accents, stolen passports, impoverished counts and impertinent ladies' maids… Trollope's most serious attempt to escape from his own personality.» — Walpole (Summary by )
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