Three Men in a Boat (To Say Nothing of the Dog)
Jerome K. Jerome
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
Three Men in a Boat (To Say Nothing of the Dog), published in 1889, is a humorous account by Jerome K. Jerome of a boating holiday on the Thames between Kingston and Oxford.
The book was intended initially to be a serious travel guide, with accounts of local history of places along the route, but the humorous elements eventually took over, to the point where the serious and somewhat sentimental passages now seem like an unnecessary distraction to the essentially comic novel. One of the most praised things about Three Men in a Boat is how undated it appears to modern readers. The jokes seem fresh and witty even today.
The three men were based on Jerome himself and two real-life friends, George, and Harris. The dog, Montmorency, however, was entirely fictional, but, as Jerome had remarked, "had much of me in it." (Summary from Wikipedia) (6 hr 38 min)
Chapters
Chapter 01 | 22:18 | Read by Geetu Melwani |
Chapter 02 | 14:27 | Read by Betsie Bush |
Chapter 03 | 16:05 | Read by Betsie Bush |
Chapter 04 | 22:59 | Read by Jim Mullins |
Chapter 05 | 19:10 | Read by Linton |
Chapter 06 | 21:26 | Read by Brooks Seveer |
Chapter 07 | 18:00 | Read by Cori Samuel |
Chapter 08 | 22:38 | Read by Chip |
Chapter 09 | 19:42 | Read by Chris Hughes |
Chapter 10 | 22:37 | Read by Marlo Dianne |
Chapter 11 | 23:03 | Read by Cori Samuel |
Chapter 12 | 24:21 | Read by Jim Mowatt |
Chapter 13 | 28:03 | Read by Peter Yearsley |
Chapter 14 | 21:37 | Read by Matthew Walton |
Chapter 15 | 36:08 | Read by Peter Yearsley |
Chapter 16 | 8:31 | Read by Kim Braun |
Chapter 17 | 16:58 | Read by Asaf Bartov |
Chapter 18 | 15:45 | Read by Betsie Bush |
Chapter 19 | 24:56 | Read by Peter Yearsley |
Reviews
LOL
A LibriVox Listener
I read this book some time ago, and I liked it. Listening to it was so much better. I really did laugh out loud a few times. I could absolutely picture each scene and all of the scruffy details. I quite enjoyed all of the different narrators too. Thanks for the river tour!
Best story every
X
Old J is a genius
Wonderful, Humor At Its Best
potuc
Even a listen to the first chapter will give you many, many laughs. I'm surprised by how relevant the humor still is, all these years later, as he flips through a book and finds he has all but one of the diseases listed, many of them fatal, by reading the symptoms and discovering he has many of them. This book is literal comedic genius, you really need to listen to this.
Relaxing Listen
Phxjennifer
This is one of the 19th Century's classic books, filled with understated and self-deprecating humor, but I read so fast that I could never enjoy it before. An audio book is the perfect way to sit back and join them on the river. The narrators were all good to excellent and the minor technical issues didn't distract.
Has humour and a poetic feel
Alex Polkovsky In Canada
I'm enjoying hearing this book read. I has portions of humour and some of it is poetic in language and cadence. The book came recommended by a friend of mine.
ARAA
Very funny even by today standards. Some of the references I didnât get but that is to be expected. The Author honestly couldâve been a pretty good standup comedian.
Ageless Humor. 😂👍🏻
Fred Brandt
I hate multiple readers. One good reader like Karen Savage, Mark Smith, Bob Neufeld, John Greenman, Barry Eads, Kara Shellenburg or Gordon Mackenzie always appreciated.
Makes me chuckle every time!
Laura
I adore this author. His style of humor and the times when he gets very contemplative make for an enjoyable read.