Coleshanger


Read by Norman E Williams

(4.2 stars; 4 reviews)

“Coleshanger people are pretty bad,” said Uncle Edward. “They won’t cross water after sunset. And they have to be in bed by midnight, otherwise they think that they'll be turned into baboons and apes. They also worship the flea.”

Written in 1952, Coleshanger is a humorous, whimsical and charming recount of English village life in the early part of the last century, a tale waiting seventy years to be heard, but still very much the story of us today.


This book comes from Scribl.com. Visit Scribl to support the author or learn how to self-publish your own audiobook.

License

Chapters

Coleshanger 01 Read by Norman E Williams
Coleshanger 02 Read by Norman E Williams
Coleshanger 03 Read by Norman E Williams
Coleshanger 04 Read by Norman E Williams
Coleshanger 05 Read by Norman E Williams
Coleshanger 06 Read by Norman E Williams
Coleshanger 07 Read by Norman E Williams
Coleshanger 08 Read by Norman E Williams
Coleshanger 09 Read by Norman E Williams
Coleshanger 10 Read by Norman E Williams
Coleshanger 11 Read by Norman E Williams
Coleshanger 12 Read by Norman E Williams
Coleshanger 13 Read by Norman E Williams

Reviews


(0 stars)

I have huge praise and admiration for this book and recommend it highly to other listeners. This book has a strange name that made me avoid it for several weeks. However, I was totally absorbed with the first paragraph I heard. The stories very funny and amusing. I listened to ...


(0 stars)

This has to be one the funniest Podiobooks I've listened to in quite awhile! I love that it's also one hundred p real!Having lived in a small town, the way that people "knows" everything about each other and yet things go on differently behind closed door. I think a lot ...


(0 stars)

This was an enjoyable tale, more than worth my time. Coleshanger has added at least one new insult and a couple of new saying to my vocabulary.


(0 stars)

What Abby said! Bloody well written and read. You are a funny and talented writer & reader, Mr. Corfield.