The War of the Worlds (Version 3)
Gelesen von Cori Samuel
H. G. Wells
No one would have believed, in the last years of the nineteenth century, that the Earth was being scrutinised and studied from across the gulf of space. With infinite complacency, humanity went about its little affairs, serene in its assurance of its empire over matter. It is possible that the micro-organisms we watch under a microscope, do the same. Few people gave thought to the idea of life on other planets, and none imagined that it could be so vastly superior in intellect to ourselves. No one considered the possibility of extra-terrestrial danger. Yet the eyes that regarded our planet were envious and unsympathetic, and slowly and surely drew their plans against us. (Cori Samuel, adapted from Chapter One.) (6 hr 54 min)
Chapters
Bewertungen
excellent reading
Bicberly
Loved listening to this version of War of the World's! I'd listen to it again I enjoyed it so much! Corey Samuels does a great job giving voice to the characters' wide range of emotions.
Great book, interesting reading
Bookinaire
I'd been a fan of War of the Worlds since I heard the Jeff Wayne musical as a teen. I really enjoyed the Steven Spielberg movie, yes I even thought Tom Cruise was good! But I'd never actually read the book. It was insightful to imagine how early 19th century England would've handled an alien invasion. Technology is different than today but people seem to change very little. The lady who retorted to the narrator that she'd "heard quite enough of the alien" is a reaction I can imagine many people having if an invasion happened now. Instead we'd have it on the various social medias with claims of fake news or tinfoil hatters. One of my favourite parts was Cori's narration! I couldn't help but imagine the actual narrator in the book being a woman. A progressive one at that as she had a wife! It was nice to imagine such a progressive society existing at the time.
great listen
Jon
Great job Cory! Thoroughly enjoyed.
Sherlockian Baker Street Irregular
Excellent story, eerily previews WWI & WWII destruction and rebirth of London in an 1897 tale-- earning Wells his moniker as "the Shakespeare of science fiction." Reader is tremendous, catching all the emotion, horror, and yes beauty of the tale.
excellent professional reader
Dbugeja
this is by far the best version, evidently read by an expert reader, with a clear voice that makes the narrated story come to life! thanks to this wonderful volunteer
Good, but my generation has heard it rewritten too many times.
Dzwsin
Good book, but probably way better in it's time as I've seen a lot of movies about alien invasions and this book surely inspired them as I felt this was like every other invasion story. overall I liked it and it had every element you'd want in an invasion story; suspense, vast difference in biology/technology, a relatable struggle, etc. I also enjoy how this book brought a new perspective to how a conflict can seemingly come out of nowhere and uproot the lives of entire civilizations. but sadly the book was anticlimactic and parts dragged on longer than I would have personally liked.
must listen
Patrick Richardson
if i ever read the book, i didn't remember it well. I think all i remember is the famous US radio show and the resulting two movies. This is truly a great of science fiction. Well written and full of prescient imagination. On top of that, the book is extremely well read. If you like sci-fi-- however remotely-- this is a must listen. The book blows away any of the adaptations.
Indeed a story to make you think and keep you absorbed
Alan
I started this wonderful narrative with another version, which simply failed partway through and left me in suspense. With a huge amount of luck, I found this version with a reader with such a relaxing voice and now I have finished with such an appreciation of microscopic things and tier power. Small is the new big!