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The Eustace Diamonds

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(4,456 Sterne; 91 Bewertungen)

Lizzie Greystock, a fortune-hunter who ensnares the sickly, dissipated Sir Florian Eustace, is soon left a very wealthy widow and mother. While clever and beautiful, Lizzie has several character flaws; the greatest of these is an almost pathological delight in lying, even when it cannot benefit her. Before he dies, the disillusioned Sir Florian discovers all this, but does not think to change the generous terms of his will.

The diamonds of the book's title are a necklace, a Eustace family heirloom that Sir Florian gave to Lizzie to wear. Lizzie attempts to hold onto them, much to the irritation of the longtime family lawyer, Mr Camperdown. The Eustaces find themselves in an awkward position. On the one hand, the diamonds are a valuable heirloom to which Lizzie may not have a legal claim, but on the other, they do not want to antagonize the mother of the heir to the family estate (Lizzie having only a life interest).

Meanwhile, after a respectable period of mourning, Lizzie searches for another husband, and "the plot thickens". (Summary from Wikipedia)

This is the third of Trollope’s six “Palliser” novels. LibriVox recordings of other novels in the series are available:
1-Can You Forgive Her?
2-Phineas Finn, the Irish Member
3-The Eustace Diamonds
4-Phineas Redux
5-The Prime Minister
6-The Duke’s Children (27 hr 30 min)

Chapters

Lizzie Greystock

24:59

Read by Laura Koskinen

Lady Eustace

21:56

Read by Philippa

Lucy Morris

21:39

Read by Notelrac

Frank Greystock

18:18

Read by cvd

The Eustace Necklace

30:04

Read by Philippa

Lady Linlithgow's Mission

18:56

Read by Philippa

Mr. Burke's Speeches

21:47

Read by Philippa

The Conquering Hero Comes

16:16

Read by par2323

Showing What the Miss Fawns Said, and What Mrs. Hittaway Thought

27:06

Read by Philippa

Lizzie and Her Lover

32:13

Read by Hannah Dowell

Lord Fawn at His Office

16:18

Read by Laura Koskinen

"I Only Thought of It"

15:10

Read by Lee Ann Howlett

Showing What Frank Greystock Did

21:50

Read by DianaJMB

"Doan't Thou Marry for Munny"

21:31

Read by Philippa

"I'll Give You a Hundred Guinea Brooch"

24:48

Read by Philippa

Certainly an Heirloom

18:46

Read by Catherine Millward

The Diamonds Are Seen in Public

18:02

Read by TriciaG

"And I Have Nothing to Give"

27:03

Read by Catherine Millward

"As My Brother"

26:19

Read by Catherine Millward

The Diamonds Become Troublesome

15:23

Read by Laura Koskinen

"Ianthe's Soul"

20:30

Read by Christine Blachford

Lady Eustace Procures a Pony for the Use of Her Cousin

13:37

Read by Lee Ann Howlett

Frank Greystock's First Visit to Portray

20:05

Read by skellie

Showing What Frank Greystock Thought About Marriage

15:46

Read by TriciaG

Mr. Dove's Opinion

16:16

Read by Catherine Millward

Mr. Gowran Is Very Funny

27:45

Read by Catherine Millward

Lucy Morris Misbehaves

15:21

Read by Catherine Millward

Mr. Dove in His Chambers

28:19

Read by Catherine Millward

"I Had Better Go Away"

20:04

Read by Catherine Millward

Mr. Greystock's Troubles

21:46

Read by Catherine Millward

Frank Greystock's Second Visit to Portray

27:45

Read by Catherine Millward

Mr. and Mrs. Hittaway in Scotland

13:57

Read by Catherine Millward

"It Won't Be True"

21:35

Read by Catherine Millward

Lady Linlithgow at Home

20:03

Read by Sage Tyrtle

Too Bad for Sympathy

23:54

Read by Sage Tyrtle

Lizzie's Guests

20:10

Read by Catherine Millward

Lizzie's First Day

28:25

Read by Catherine Millward

Nappie's Grey Horse

30:27

Read by Simon Evers

Sir Griffin Takes an Unfair Advantage

9:55

Read by Simon Evers

"You Are Not Angry?"

11:05

Read by Laura Koskinen

"Likewise the Bears in Couples Agree"

21:55

Read by Andrew Coleman

Sunday Morning

13:16

Read by Lee Ann Howlett

Life at Portray

22:31

Read by Lee Ann Howlett

A Midnight Adventure

21:14

Read by Bethany Simpson

The Journey to London

17:12

Read by Bethany Simpson

Lucy Morris in Brook Street

23:53

Read by Bethany Simpson

Matching Priory

24:11

Read by Laura Koskinen

Lizzie's Condition

13:13

Read by Lee Ann Howlett

Bunfit and Gager

22:56

Read by Mil Nicholson

In Hertford Street

20:55

Read by Andrew Coleman

Confidence

13:13

Read by Andrew Coleman

Mrs. Carbuncle Goes to the Theatre

27:54

Read by Andrew Coleman

Lizzie's Sick-Room

28:02

Read by Andrew Coleman

"I Suppose I May Say a Word"

23:59

Read by Laura Koskinen

Quints or Semitenths

11:41

Read by Laura Koskinen

Job's Comforters

21:21

Read by TriciaG

Humpty Dumpty

26:25

Read by Mil Nicholson

"The Fiddle with One String"

11:03

Read by Mil Nicholson

Mr. Gowran Up in London

20:13

Read by Philippa

"Let It Be As Though It Had Never Been"

24:51

Read by Philippa

Lizzie's Great Friend

32:14

Read by TriciaG

"You Know Where My Heart Is"

16:26

Read by Lee Ann Howlett

The Corsair Is Afraid

17:37

Read by Lee Ann Howlett

Lizzie's Last Scheme

13:33

Read by Lee Ann Howlett

Tribute

19:15

Read by Lee Ann Howlett

The Aspirations of Mr. Emilius

19:20

Read by TriciaG

The Eye of the Public

18:47

Read by Hoosemon

The Major

19:36

Read by TriciaG

"I Cannot Do It"

25:46

Read by TriciaG

Alas!

15:02

Read by Maire Rhode

Lizzie Is Threatened with the Treadmill

27:32

Read by Maire Rhode

Lizzie Triumphs

20:01

Read by Maire Rhode

Lizzie's Last Lover

24:16

Read by LC

Lizzie at the Police-Court

13:13

Read by Bethany Simpson

Lord George Gives His Reasons

12:40

Read by Bethany Simpson

Lizzie Returns to Scotland

25:30

Read by TriciaG

The Story of Lucy Morris Is Concluded

18:44

Read by cvd

The Trial

21:42

Read by Andrew Coleman

Once More at Portray

20:09

Read by Lee Ann Howlett

What Was Said About It All at Matching

14:17

Read by Laura Koskinen

Bewertungen

interesting, witty and eventful

(4 Sterne)

I like the Palliser series better than the Barchester Chronicles, better crafted, more interesting characters and livelier. A very funny and cynical portrait of 1860's high society. Excellent readers, better than version 2 of the same book . A pity about the blatant anti-Semitism, but that's what the world is like, mustn't let it chaff my hooked nose!

Another good Trollope

(4 Sterne)

This book is a little different from the usual Trollope love stories, but it is still good. Chapter 34 is a gem. Listen to it even if you don't have time for the whole book. It's correct name is "Lady Linlithgow at Home." It is mis-titled in the Librivox listing.

overall good

(4 Sterne)

Even volunteer should learn how to pronounce all names and words before embarking. Lady LinLITHgow. GROVE-ner (not Grows-vee-nor!) Legge ("leg") Wilson, not "leggy" or "ledgy." The "oe" in Madame Max Goesler's name is the umlaut O - it is never "Goosler" or "Gosler" or "Gowsler." And many others.

(4 Sterne)

I was just going to comment after listening to chapter 34 and now I see someone else marked that chapter out for special mention. Sage Tyrtle does a marvelous job of acting out by voice the characters in the chapter. Delightful! Brilliance rising to combine with Trollope’s brilliance.

compelling Story

(5 Sterne)

An epic tale of lies, love and loss. The majority of the readers are very good some using excellent voices for the various characters. A few chapters have quite low volume making for difficult listening.

(3 Sterne)

Some readers are so much better than others. The sound quality for some readers was poor. Please review the readers' work before including in the presentation.

not my favourite by anthony Trollope

(3,5 Sterne)

The story is somewhat slow at times. Some of the readers are exellent.

Thanks - title error fixed

(0 Sterne)

Thank you for spotting that, Champagnolle. The error has now been fixed.