Studies in Classic American Literature
D. H. Lawrence
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
The staid academic title belies the freewheeling prose of D.H. Lawrence's essays, which are as contrarian, penetrating, and sometimes unpalatable as one might expect from the author. "America has never been easy, and is not easy to-day. Americans have always been at a certain tension." - Summary by Kazbek (7 hr 5 min)
Chapters
FOREWORD | 4:58 | Read by Kazbek |
THE SPIRIT OF PLACE | 18:07 | Read by ToddHW |
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN | 29:54 | Read by GOrsini |
HECTOR ST. JOHN DE CRÈVECŒUR | 26:46 | Read by S. Emily Lee |
FENIMORE COOPER'S WHITE NOVELS | 27:16 | Read by Winnifred Assmann |
FENIMORE COOPER'S LEATHERSTOCKING NOVELS | 34:42 | Read by Chris Pyle |
EDGAR ALLAN POE | 41:02 | Read by Victoria Scrimer |
NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE AND "THE SCARLET LETTER" | 54:56 | Read by Kay Hill-Johnson |
HAWTHORNE'S "BLITHEDALE ROMANCE" | 23:34 | Read by Ehsan Ahmed Mehedi |
DANA'S "TWO YEARS BEFORE THE MAST" | 40:35 | Read by Chris Pyle |
HERMAN MELVILLE'S "TYPEE" AND "OMOO" | 34:04 | Read by OmarC |
HERMAN MELVILLE'S "MOBY DICK" | 47:53 | Read by MoonLylith |
WHITMAN | 41:13 | Read by MoonLylith |