The Red Runners


Read by LibriVox Volunteers

(3 stars; 11 reviews)

This Is one of the Hawkins series and a right good one at that! Big boys and little boys, manly and "yellow", all these figure in the adventures which are recounted and the reader is quite breathless by the time he has taken part even vicariously in the numerous pranks and serious experiences. Good wholesome lessons are taught also as when the bully of the group comes to realize some of the big things of life just before he is called to the larger life beyond this one A real boys book but girls will like It also. (Bookseller and Stationer 1923)

Seckatary Hawkins, a fat boy with a cowlick hairdo, records daily minutes of the adventures of a remarkably organized group of boys. The group of ten or so boys (some boys rotated in and out of the club) have their own clubhouse on the river bank, complete with a stove for heat, a telephone, and even an organ for the required singing practice.

While never the president of the club, Seckatary Hawkins is clearly the smartest member and the leader. He is regularly called upon by the books' few adult characters and many of the youthful ones to solve various mysteries and to keep the river bank safe. (Adapted from Wikipedia) (7 hr 56 min)

Chapters

Home Again 14:30 Read by colbyball
A Boxing Match 15:55 Read by Elisabeth G.
Harkinson 12:35 Read by Elisabeth G.
The Camp on the Island 12:22 Read by Elisabeth G.
The Woodchoppers 12:32 Read by Elisabeth G.
Singing by the Campfire 14:52 Read by Elisabeth G.
Ham Gardner's Tip 17:13 Read by AndiSue Eyler
Hawkins Against Harkinston 14:01 Read by AndiSue Eyler
Hawkins Dons the Gloves 14:17 Read by AndiSue Eyler
The End of Vacation 12:56 Read by TheIntern356
Link's Farewell Party 17:20 Read by TheIntern356
The Red Runners 15:12 Read by TheIntern356
The Silver Cup 16:19 Read by TheIntern356
Shadow Loomis Joins 16:51 Read by TheIntern356
The Call of a Nightbird 13:21 Read by kaylawhy
A Pair of Owls 13:15 Read by kaylawhy
Seventh in Line 13:19 Read by M. Bradley Peters
A Hallowe'en Phantom 13:34 Read by M. Bradley Peters
The Face in the Dark 12:30 Read by mleigh
The Pelhams in Trouble 14:31 Read by mleigh
The Canary 13:16 Read by mleigh
The Hidden Houseboat 12:36 Read by mleigh
Androfski the Silent 15:04 Read by Annie Mars
Saving the Secret 15:53 Read by Simona Perego
Lasky Goes Home 18:03 Read by Simona Perego
A Bag of Toys 17:47 Read by Simona Perego
New Year's Eve 15:16 Read by imilshtein
A Rolling Stone 15:20 Read by imilshtein
The Trap that Didn't Work 18:13 Read by Simona Perego
Harkinson's Last Visit 16:11 Read by Simona Perego
The Prayer in the Log House 16:22 Read by Anya
The Roundup 15:15 Read by Anya

Reviews

Another well written book taking me to a bygone era


(4 stars)

5 stars for the story, 4 stars because of the chapters that were difficult to understand. it seems there are more readers with strong accents lately. As frustrating as it is to listen to chapters a few times to get the basic understanding of the story, I realize this is helping me understand communication with others better.


(3 stars)

Entertaining story of youth before the days that electronic devices and a myriad of organized sports took over the imaginations, creativity and individuality of young minds. Sadly I found one reader's presentations difficult to understand, interrupting the flow of the tale. I truly appreciate the effort but it did detract from my overall enjoyment.

Very poorly reader!


(0.5 stars)

Another very poorly reader! It sounds like the reader had his head in a box while reading. Not at all enjoyable to listen to. I guess there is no screening of readers on Librivox...too bad, it might have been a decent platform otherwise.

Iconic but odd


(2 stars)

I found the idea of these "good" boys who divide their time between gang warfare and choral singing most odd. Surprised to find the book serieswas huge in its age. Different times.. ..Mainly well read but really let down by a few chapters.