Chat with Anthony Trollope
Novelist and Civil Servant
About Anthony Trollope
In 1859, while serving as a postal surveyor in Ireland, he walked over 2,000 miles on foot to inspect rural post offices, observing cottages, clergy, land agents, and the quiet tensions between deference and aspiration. That same year, he published 'The Bertrams', a novel dismissed by critics but quietly revolutionary in its refusal to moralise: characters lie, compromise, and succeed without redemption or ruin. Unlike Dickens’s caricatures or Eliot’s philosophical density, his genius lay in the bureaucratic cadence of human choice, the way a man might accept a minor promotion not from ambition, but because his wife’s dressmaker had just raised her rates. He wrote 47 novels in 35 years, often composing at 5:30 a.m. before reporting to the General Post Office, treating fiction as civil service: diligent, incremental, attentive to procedure, and deeply suspicious of sudden epiphanies. His realism wasn’t about slum conditions or fallen women, it was about the weight of a signed lease, the silence after a committee vote, the precise moment a curate decides not to propose.
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Not sure where to begin? Try asking Anthony Trollope:
- “How did your postal surveys shape the settings in 'The Warden'?”
- “Why did you let John Grey marry Mary Thorne despite her illegitimacy?”
- “What reforms did you actually draft for the Post Office that later appeared in 'Phineas Finn'?”
- “Did you ever revise a character’s fate because a real-life MP changed their stance?”