The Lair of the White Worm (Version 2)
Bram Stoker
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
The Lair of the White Worm (also known as The Garden of Evil) is a horror novel by Irish author Bram Stoker, who also wrote Dracula. It is partly based on the legend of the Lambton Worm. The book was published in 1911, the year before Stoker's death, with color illustrations by Pamela Colman Smith. In 1988, it was adapted into a film by Ken Russell. (Summary by Wikipedia) (5 hr 34 min)
Chapters
Chapter 1 | 8:01 | Read by Mark Penfold |
Chapter 2 | 14:28 | Read by Mark Penfold |
Chapter 3 | 9:00 | Read by Mark Penfold |
Chapter 4 | 19:09 | Read by Richard Kilmer (1942 - 2022) |
Chapter 5 | 15:01 | Read by Richard Kilmer (1942 - 2022) |
Chapter 6 | 11:38 | Read by Richard Kilmer (1942 - 2022) |
Chapter 7 | 12:01 | Read by Richard Kilmer (1942 - 2022) |
Chapter 8 | 15:41 | Read by Richard Kilmer (1942 - 2022) |
Chapter 9 | 10:44 | Read by Richard Kilmer (1942 - 2022) |
Chapter 10 | 15:42 | Read by Joshua Paul Johnson |
Chapter 11 | 9:49 | Read by Ethan Rampton |
Chapter 12 | 9:16 | Read by Ethan Rampton |
Chapter 13 | 11:00 | Read by Elliott Miller |
Chapter 14 | 14:54 | Read by Haylayer Flaga |
Chapter 15 | 5:54 | Read by Barry Eads |
Chapter 16 | 9:31 | Read by Barry Eads |
Chapter 17 | 6:51 | Read by Haylayer Flaga |
Chapter 18 | 8:03 | Read by Haylayer Flaga |
Chapter 19 | 10:45 | Read by Haylayer Flaga |
Chapter 20 | 12:37 | Read by Haylayer Flaga |
Chapter 21 | 11:42 | Read by Haylayer Flaga |
Chapter 22 | 5:48 | Read by Richard Schipper |
Chapter 23 | 13:38 | Read by Richard Schipper |
Chapter 24 | 12:44 | Read by Richard Schipper |
Chapter 25 | 13:25 | Read by Barry Eads |
Chapter 26 | 11:14 | Read by Barry Eads |
Chapter 27 | 13:32 | Read by Barry Eads |
Chapter 28 | 22:30 | Read by Barry Eads |
Reviews
Not bad
mikezane
I guess I am not a Bram Stoker fan. The story doesn't really draw me in, I found myself listening just to hear how it ended. Some of the recordings are a bit rough; you can improve them with the equalizer. The quality noticeably improves the closer to the end of the book, so if you are a Stoker fan, go for it. I just felt the story itself was somewhat of a disappointment.
Wasted potential...
A LibriVox Listener
The story has some potential but it is wasted because Stoker gave his plot a rather slow pace and dwells in stereotypical descriptions of the English countryside, Africans etc.
nice read
A LibriVox Listener
would encourage reader to do more. Such as Victor Hugo, Churchill, Pope.