The Island of Doctor Moreau
H. G. Wells
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
The Island of Doctor Moreau is an 1896 science fiction novel written by H. G. Wells, addressing ideas of society and community, human nature and identity, religion, Darwinism, and eugenics.
When the novel was written in the late 19th century, England's scientific community was engulfed by debates on animal vivisection. Interest groups were even formed to tackle the issue: the British Union for the Abolition of Vivisection was formed two years after the publication of the novel. The novel is presented as a discovered manuscript, introduced by the narrator's nephew; it then 'transcribes' the tale. (Summary from Wikipedia) (4 hr 39 min)
Chapters
INTRODUCTION | 2:56 | Read by Alex Patterson |
IN THE DINGEY OF THE "LADY VAIN" | 5:53 | Read by madeupname |
THE MAN WHO WAS GOING NOWHERE | 7:06 | Read by Laura M.D. |
THE STRANGE FACE | 10:08 | Read by bignate_2000 |
AT THE SCHOONER'S RAIL | 6:48 | Read by Cori Samuel |
THE MAN WHO HAD NOWHERE TO GO | 7:50 | Read by martyd |
THE EVIL-LOOKING BOATMEN | 9:45 | Read by martyd |
THE LOCKED DOOR | 9:12 | Read by martyd |
THE CRYING OF THE PUMA | 6:49 | Read by Stephan Möbius |
THE THING IN THE FOREST | 22:14 | Read by Stephan Möbius |
THE CRYING OF THE MAN | 8:01 | Read by Meredith Hughes |
THE HUNTING OF THE MAN | 12:11 | Read by Meredith Hughes |
THE SAYERS OF THE LAW | 17:45 | Read by Meredith Hughes |
THE PARLEY | 11:00 | Read by Cori Samuel |
DOCTOR MOREAU EXPLAINS | 28:48 | Read by John Gonzalez |
CONCERNING THE BEAST FOLK | 10:59 | Read by Alex Foster |
HOW THE BEAST FOLK TASTE BLOOD | 26:50 | Read by JemmaBlythe |
A CATASTROPHE | 13:25 | Read by JemmaBlythe |
THE FINDING OF MOREAU | 7:54 | Read by clarknova |
MONTGOMERY'S BANK HOLIDAY | 14:13 | Read by neo45 |
ALONE WITH THE BEAST FOLK | 9:24 | Read by clarknova |
THE REVERSION OF THE BEAST FOLK | 21:37 | Read by clarknova |
THE MAN ALONE | 9:15 | Read by JemmaBlythe |
Reviews
deadmann
A classic story. The changing readers made it hard to really get into the story. With one reader the story is more cohesive and seems like a single work but broken up between several people with different voices and styles makes it a hard listen in long sittings. ESPECIALLY chapters 16 & 17. MY GOODNESS! How in the world did that woman not have her recording thrown out after the first 2 minutes. I know it’s volunteer readers but it sounds like someone talking through a hole in their throat into one of those voice things but with somehow less emotion. I ended up looking up those chapters and reading them myself then got back into the audiobook. I’d love if someone would redo those chapters with an actual human being instead of a parrot Dr. Moreau got his hands on.
great story
DannyFresh
Love this book and author. My only problem is Jemma Blythe her voice is scratchy and at times inaudible. The worst part is that she does some of the most important chapters. She also ruined parts of The Odyssey.
Giraffe3
Chapter 3 read by bignate, I believe, is when I got lost; couldn't hear half of what he said then he'd raise his voice startlingly(and not necessary) ... Kind of hard to keep your attention with all the different readers...
Mostly Good
A LibriVox Listener
this was fairly well done, my only complaint would be that it's a a bit wearing listening to the several chapters that JemmaBlythe reads, her voice is too scratchy and she did some of the longer chapters
Interesting Book
Nci
really good book. i enjoyed it but there shud only be one person reading as tht is very discracting. also the one lady had a terrible voice and was not easy to understand
Multiple readers, good & some a bit rough
Billy Reiber
All in all good readings, but many different readers for different chapters. Some good but some, not so much.
The voice doe
Datboi69
i cant stand that guys anything cadence lisp baratone nothing about him should be reading for recordings
A LibriVox Listener
I hated the narrator Gemma. Her voice is low, monotone and robotic. There needs to be some quality control here. Not all voices, are suited for decent narration. I notice, other books, that have heavy, Indian accents reading too. It's not racist, to expect clear, concise and God forbid, some interesting voice intonations too! Librivox is silly to accept everyone,what next, allow an 4 year old, with heavy foreign accent to narrate.