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Joanna TrollopeJoanna Trollope
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Critical perspective  
BiographyNovelist Joanna Trollope was born on 9 December 1943, and was educated at Reigate County School for Girls and St. Hugh's College, Oxford. She worked for the Foreign Office (1965-7) and held various teaching posts (1967-79), before becoming a full-time writer. She is the author of eleven bestselling contemporary novels, including Girl from the South (2002), the story of an American Southerner who takes a job in London to escape the family and social pressures of her home in South Carolina. Brother & Sister (2004), is a story which explores the themes of adoption, loyalty and the nature of identity.    
  Genres (in alphabetical order)Fiction, Non-fiction     BibliographyEliza Stanhope Hutchinson, 1978 Parson Harding's Daughter Hutchinson, 1979 Leaves from the Valley Hutchinson, 1980 Legacy of Love: Charlotte, Alexandra, Cara (as Caroline Harvey) Octopus, 1980 The City of Gems Hutchinson, 1981 Britannia's Daughters: A Study of Women in the British Empire Hutchinson, 1983 The Steps of the Sun Hutchinson, 1983 The Taverners' Place Hutchinson, 1986 The Choir Hutchinson, 1988 A Village Affair Bloomsbury, 1989 A Passionate Man Bloomsbury, 1990 The Rector's Wife Bloomsbury, 1991 The Men and the Girls Bloomsbury, 1992 A Castle in Italy Doubleday, 1993 A Second Legacy (as Caroline Harvey) Doubleday, 1993 A Spanish Lover Bloomsbury, 1993 The Country Habit: An Anthology (editor) Bantam, 1993 The Best of Friends Bloomsbury, 1995 Faith (A Bloomsbury Quid) Bloomsbury, 1996 Next of Kin Bloomsbury, 1996 The Brass Dolphin (as Caroline Harvey) Doubleday, 1997 Other People's Children Bloomsbury, 1998 Marrying the Mistress Bloomsbury, 2000 Girl from the South Bloomsbury, 2002 Brother & Sister Bloomsbury, 2004 Second Honeymoon Bloomsbury, 2006 The Book Boy (novella) Bloomsbury, 2006 Friday Nights Bloomsbury, 2008  
  Critical Perspective
Trollope chooses as her subject matter the universals of human experience: birth, death, love, loss, anger, pain, fear, jealousy, joy, poverty, despair and the fear of change, but she roots these in an environment that is quintessentially English. She displays a love for architectural description, for gardens, plants and landscape that are a characteristic of much English writing. Somewhere at the beginning of each of her novels there is always a description of the building(s) where the main characters live. The description of James Mallow's rather ramshackle house in Oxford from The Men and the Girls (1992), for example, is typical: 'It was his house. He had bought it nearly thirty years before, long before the carelessly built Victorian area of Oxford, called Jericho, had risen from a near slum to gentility. It was a low double-fronted red house with a Gothic doorway and wide sash windows edged in blue-and-yellow brick … and James loved it'.
There are few British institutions that are left undissected by Trollope's steely scalpel. The Church of England is exposed for its petty church politics in The Choir (1988), and its inhuman treatment of its ministers and their families in The Rector's Wife (1991) and the English Village, a supposed Eden dear to the hearts of many an Englishman, is revealed in many of her novels, notably The Rector's Wife and A Village Affair (1989) as a cruel hotbed of hypocrisy and intrigue. Even the romantic rural idyll of the farmer's life is painfully described in Next of Kin (1996) - perhaps Trollope's darkest, most serious and mature novel - as a lifetime of sacrifice, uncertainty and debt.
Likewise, social institutions and relationships - marriage, sexuality, parenthood, the generation gap, growing old and sibling rivalry are the basis of her plots, and are rooted not only in their physical environment but also their historical context. Reading Trollope's novels gives one the strong impression that she has her finger firmly on the pulse of contemporary Britain, indeed, a historian looking back to study the main social preoccupations of the 1980s and '90s and the early years of this century would learn a lot about how the power structure between men and women, and within the family, was changing during these years. The Family is a central preoccupation, but it is the late twentieth century family with its shifting relations that Trollope is mainly concerned with. Father/son relations come under scrutiny in A Passionate Man (1990), mother/daughter relations in Next of Kin, The Men and the Girls and numerous others, as do forms of secondary parenthood such as adoption (in Next of Kin) and being a step-parent (in A Passionate Man, Marrying the Mistress (2000) and Other People's Children (1998). Sex features quite often in the novels, but Trollope's attitude towards it is neither prudish nor sensationalist. She sees sexuality as a subject of scrutiny in that it symbolises strong feelings between individuals and for the sensations of unease it creates in those around those individuals. Middle-aged sex and a relationship between a widow and her deceased husband's son (A Passionate Man), lesbian sex (A Village Affair) and that between a man and woman who, along with their spouses have been friends for decades (The Best of Friends, 1995), the girl who moves in with her best friend's recently bereaved father (Next of Kin) and many other delicate amorous situations are treated with sensitivity, elegance and wisdom - not as scandalous incidences of lust, but as part of the human need for warmth and understanding.
One of Trollope's favourite themes is misconceptions between couples - she is particularly deft at describing how a relationship can be perfectly happy but can slip, almost imperceptively, due to external circumstances, into disaster. Archie and Liza in A Passionate Man experience such a slip when he falls in love with his father's widow and she becomes infatuated with a younger colleague. Kate and James's relationship comes to grief in The Men and the Girls when Kate realises she is bored by her older partner and seeks independence, agreeing to temporarily leave her teenage daughter with her ex-partner (a highly unorthodox 'new family' situation). Things end badly for Kate and James's relationship. Liza and Archie, however, grow from their experience and manage to save their marriage; giving the book a satisfyingly happy ending.
Trollope's style is elegant, poised and seemingly effortless. It is common for her to have several points of activity going on at the same time in her novels - Girl from the South (2000), for example, is set in Charleston, South Carolina and London and A Spanish Lover (1993) vacillates between Seville and a house in the village of Langworth - yet she moves from one scene to another with confident smoothness. Her dialogue is simple and direct and often very funny. One of my favourite pieces of dialogue comes in the playful, irreverent conversations in The Men and the Girls, between the ageing, ailing (and probably very frightened and vulnerable) Uncle Leonard and the Chinese cleaning lady who has recently escaped from her violent husband: 'Leonard was very happy. He adored the days Mrs Cheng came ''Where's my coffee? It's ten past eleven. What does Kate pay you for … ?" "I paid double," she said, "to put up with you." '
Her characters are the type of people you might bump into in the High Street, normal people, neither good nor evil, often making mistakes, faced with decisions they are uncertain about and sometimes breaking out of the mould. It is obvious that, though Trollope has rich imagination, a wonderful adeptness with plot and, as she herself points out, does a lot of research for her novels, she triumphs above all because she writes about the environment in which she lives and about people that she knows well. As her great grandfather Anthony Trollope said, 'the novelist's task is to make his readers so intimately acquainted with his characters that the creations of his brain should be to them speaking, moving, living human creatures. This he can never do unless he know these fictitious personages himself, and he can never know them well unless he can live with them in the full reality of established intimacy'. I think it is right to say that Joanne Trollope, writing as she does about the class and environment in which she lives, has that intimacy her great grandfather so admired, and that thousands of her grateful readers would agree with me.
Amanda Thursfield, 2003  
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