Good Press The Kellys and the O'Kellys A1067872947
The Kellys and the O'Kellys is an early Irish novel of inheritance, courtship, and social manoeuvre, set among gentry, Catholic middle classes, lawyers, and debt-ridden aristocrats. Trollope interweaves the fortunes of Martin Kelly and Anty Lynch with the troubled romance of Lord Ballindine and Fanny Wyndham, using a capacious, ironic realism that anticipates the social breadth of his later fiction. Though touched by melodrama, the book belongs to the Victorian comedy of manners and to the nineteenth-century Irish novel's concern with land, religion, class, and money. Anthony Trollope knew Ireland intimately, having moved there in 1841 as a Post Office surveyor after early disappointments in England. His extensive travel through rural districts and provincial towns gave him a practical understanding of Irish social relations, legal entanglements, and household economies. This experience shaped the novel's unusually concrete sense of place and its sympathy for characters navigating constrained social systems. Readers interested in Trollope's development will find this novel especially rewarding. It offers not only lively plotting and humane characterization but also a revealing foundation for the moral intelligence and social observation that define his mature work.