Molly Brown's Senior Days


Read by Lynda Marie Neilson

(3.8 stars; 23 reviews)

This novel is the fourth in a series of eight books written about Miss Molly Brown of Kentucky during her education at Wellington College in the early years of the 1900's. - Summary by Lynda Marie Neilson (6 hr 2 min)

Chapters

Good News and Bad 18:01 Read by Lynda Marie Neilson
A Troubled Sunday 20:59 Read by Lynda Marie Neilson
Gossip Over the Teacups 15:37 Read by Lynda Marie Neilson
The Senior Ramble 17:36 Read by Lynda Marie Neilson
All's Well That Ends Well 13:24 Read by Lynda Marie Neilson
The Retort Courteous 14:56 Read by Lynda Marie Neilson
A Stolen Visit 16:24 Read by Lynda Marie Neilson
Barbed Arrows 12:15 Read by Lynda Marie Neilson
The Substitute 13:48 Read by Lynda Marie Neilson
The Polite Freeze-out 15:05 Read by Lynda Marie Neilson
The Ways of Providence 16:53 Read by Lynda Marie Neilson
Friendly Rivals 14:38 Read by Lynda Marie Neilson
The Drop of Poison 21:24 Read by Lynda Marie Neilson
Judy Defiant 18:33 Read by Lynda Marie Neilson
The Campus Ghost 15:05 Read by Lynda Marie Neilson
On the Grill 14:40 Read by Lynda Marie Neilson
A Christmas Eve Misunderstanding 19:31 Read by Lynda Marie Neilson
Two Christmas Breakfasts 17:58 Read by Lynda Marie Neilson
Facing the Enemy 18:58 Read by Lynda Marie Neilson
The Jubilee 12:20 Read by Lynda Marie Neilson
Farewells 14:23 Read by Lynda Marie Neilson
The Final Days 20:27 Read by Lynda Marie Neilson

Reviews


(3 stars)

I have to agree with the last review not as ardently though I appreciate the fact she took the time to finish the series thanx

Love this series,but poor readers esp.late parts Jr & ALL of Sr.


(1.5 stars)

The reader is HORRIBLY uneducated. Cannot pronounce/mispronounces quite ordinary words CONSTANTLY.I mean, 'sophomore' ??? If you cannot even say that, don't tackle a school novel! Can't pronounce alumnus/alumni, reconciliation, and many many more! Just plain bad when you have to back the play up, repeatedly listen,& try to elicit what a word means by context because it is so mangled in pronunciation. Sad - it's a very good book.