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Lodore

Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers

(3,5 Sterne; 5 Bewertungen)

The author of Frankenstein returns with her take on an Austen novel. The mother is proud, the father has many vices, yet the aristocratic name must be kept. Even more so when lord Lodore dies. His wife and daughter find themselves without protection. This novel is conserned with gender equality, education and social justice. - Summary by Stav Nisser. (17 hr 1 min)

Chapters

volume 1, chapter 1

12:11

Read by Jim Locke

volume 1, chapter 2

17:09

Read by Jim Locke

volume 1, chapter 3

19:09

Read by Jim Locke

volume 1, chapter 4

24:45

Read by Jim Locke

volume 1, chapter 5

16:05

Read by Jim Locke

volume 1, chapter 6

11:55

Read by Jim Locke

volume 1, chapter 7

18:45

Read by Jim Locke

volume 1, chapter 8

15:04

Read by Jim Locke

volume 1, chapter 9

23:39

Read by Jim Locke

volume 1, chapter 10

14:17

Read by Mike Pelton

volume 1, chapter 11

23:10

Read by Mike Pelton

volume 1, chapter 12

17:58

Read by Mike Pelton

volume 1, chapter 13

16:58

Read by Mike Pelton

volume 1, chapter 14

29:21

Read by Mike Pelton

volume 1, chapter 15

14:41

Read by Mike Pelton

volume 1, chapter 16

26:54

Read by Mike Pelton

volume 1, chapter 17

21:49

Read by Mike Pelton

volume 1, chapter 18

13:06

Read by Deon Gines

volume 2, chapter 1

13:08

Read by Deon Gines

volume 2, chapter 2

22:38

Read by Jim Locke

volume 2, chapter 3

14:02

Read by Jim Locke

volume 2, chapter 4

20:41

Read by Jim Locke

volume 2, chapter 5

25:32

Read by Linda Johnson

volume 2, chapter 6

16:48

Read by Linda Johnson

volume 2, chapter 7

27:48

Read by Linda Johnson

volume 2, chapter 8

20:30

Read by Linda Johnson

volume 2, chapter 9

27:09

Read by Linda Johnson

volume 2, chapter 10

12:34

Read by Linda Johnson

volume 2, chapter 11

23:34

Read by Linda Johnson

volume 2, chapter 12

25:02

Read by Jim Locke

volume 2, chapter 13

8:45

Read by Jim Locke

volume 2, chapter 14

18:51

Read by Jim Locke

volume 2, chapter 15

19:22

Read by Linda Johnson

volume 2, chapter 16

13:18

Read by Linda Johnson

volume 2, chapter 17

8:51

Read by Linda Johnson

volume 2, chapter 18

15:54

Read by Linda Johnson

volume 3, chapter 1

12:15

Read by Linda Johnson

volume 3, chapter 2

17:47

Read by Linda Johnson

volume 3, chapter 3

9:43

Read by Linda Johnson

volume 3, chapter 4

16:49

Read by Linda Johnson

volume 3, chapter 5

16:29

Read by Linda Johnson

volume 3, chapter 6

12:02

Read by Linda Johnson

volume 3, chapter 7

16:40

Read by Linda Johnson

volume 3, chapter 8

19:41

Read by Linda Johnson

volume 3, chapter 9

6:46

Read by Mike Pelton

volume 3, chapter 10

14:38

Read by Mike Pelton

volume 3, chapter 11

23:55

Read by Mike Pelton

volume 3, chapter 12

23:30

Read by Jim Locke

volume 3, chapter 13

25:57

Read by Jim Locke

volume 3, chapter 14

32:31

Read by Mike Pelton

volume 3, chapter 15

28:08

Read by Jim Locke

volume 3, chapter 16

19:32

Read by Jim Locke

volume 3, chapter 17

21:05

Read by Jim Locke

volume 3, chapter 18

23:30

Read by Mike Pelton

Vol.3-Conclusion

8:40

Read by Mike Pelton

Bewertungen

Lodore: Pretty Good

(3,5 Sterne)

The readers do a solid job here, although it would be nice of they were consistent about pronunciations of the title and main characters. All read clearly and most enunciate well. I am grateful they have done this lesser-known work of Mary Shelley. If you are interested in the Willstonecraft-Shelley-Godwin family saga or in the depiction of women in 19c literature you will find it rewarding... But it's not as strange and compelling as Matilda or as intense as the Last Man. MWS was a genius but this is one of her less notable works.

oh the drama! the pathos!

(1 Sterne)

Interminable blithering on by M Shelley who never says in one sentence what she can ramble on about for 20 pages. I assume her editor hung himself after getting the manuscript. The typical story of the honorable nobleman marrying a pure young beauty and being forced to leave her and flee to America due to complicated misunderstandings. Etc etc . Readers good to very good. misunderstandings.