Through Fairy Halls of My Bookhouse
Variousandolive Beaupre Miller
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
Full of delightful fairy tales, charming poems and engaging stories, this is the third volume of the "My Bookhouse" series for little ones. Originally published in the 1920's as a six volume set, these books, edited by Olive Beaupre Miller, contained the best in children's literature, stories, poems and nursery rhymes. They progressed in difficulty through the different volumes. (Summary by Maria Therese) (13 hr 36 min)
Chapters
Reviews
Mixed bag, in many ways
Kerrigan
This book is a pretty haphazard affair. The only theme that seems to carry through to the end is that most of the entries are quite short. Then again, a few are rather long. [P] The best of the book is the collection of international folk and fairy tales. The editor has brought together tales not just from Europe, but from almost every continent (I’m pretty sure Antarctica was skipped.) [P] Less compelling, to my mind, are the rest of the pieces. There are some weighty names, to be sure: Shakespeare, Milton, Dickens, etc. From these authors we get little snippets of books and poems- quality stuff, but with wildly variant tones from the fairy tales. Interspersed in the mix are bits of doggerel and common fluff. Just a couple of nonfiction bits are added for further confusion. [P] The book may well be simply a stroll through the editor’s bookcase (“bookhouse”?) which may explain the schizophrenic selection, but what is up with this title?!
Bad readers
A LibriVox Listener
Most too fast, some too choppy, poor speakers
To Carly
librivoxbooks
I don't think the archive.org developers will see your review on a project tucked away in their servers. :) You might want to contact them directly. Here's their contact page: https://archive.org/about/contact.php Good luck!
Mute. Or burst ear drums.
Carly Corday
Gripe about the relocated Volume Button deleted, now that I know where it is. :o)
Sydney Nemetchek
loved the readers super clear recordings one of my favorite odeo books on leverbox β€οΈπ§‘πππ©΅ππ