The Man Who Knew Too Much
Gelesen von Martin Clifton
G. K. Chesterton
Gilbert Keith Chesterton (1874-1936) was an influential and prolific English writer of the early 20th century. He was a journalist, a poet and a novelist. He wrote 80 books and 200 short stories in addition to his other work. He is perhaps best remembered for his ‘Father Brown’ stories; two collections of which are available at Librivox.org.
‘The Man Who Knew Too Much’ has some similarities to the Father Brown stories: Horne Fisher the eponymous hero is connected and indeed related to many of the high-ranking politicians of his age and thus ‘knows too much’ about the background of the mysteries in which he becomes embroiled and which he unravels. (Summary by Martin Clifton) (5 hr 49 min)
Chapters
Bewertungen
Worth Your Time
Reminded me of a more believable Sherlock Holmes. Also, very well read. Well worth a listen.
Enjoyable Stories
I enjoyed all these stories. While most of them had to do with English politics of the time, my lack of knowledge of the same didn't hinder my enjoying the stories
Wonderful listen
Chauncy Gardener
An entertaining seemingly unrelated set of mysteries brought to life by an exceptional reader. Listening to Martin is a delight. Would love to hear more from him.
Great reader, so-so stories.
peick
Martin Clifton does a superb job of trying to inject life into these stories, but they aren't that great, so listen for the writing style and reader's accent.
Cons and Pros
Omi
Cons. The story lacked continuity and for a while kept me interested for only 2 reasons. Firstly, out of sheer marvel at where it could possibly be going and secondly, the excellence of the reader. Pros. The individual sub plots were very interesting and even had great potential to be developed more (maybe into a series instead of being crammed into just one book). I really felt immersed into his world. I would like to see this come to life in a Netflix series
TEPID
Avid Listener
Chesterton's fame as a great writer obviously was not based on this book. The decent ending is the only reason it got at least 3 stars. The characters never come to life, and it was difficult to find the story continuity. The reader did well, but he could not overcome the basic blandness of the work.
Worth listening to
Margaret87
Martin Clifton is a gifted reader and a great pleasure to listen to. The stories are original though, as Martin Clifton says, reminiscent of Father Brown. I find them dense, not "light" listening and am going to listen to them all again.
It's Chesterton
LibriVox pop var. Vivia Bøe
...so it's worth reading. Check out his essays esp. He was a genius at getting to the heart of whatever it is he was tackling. His nonfiction is what I am blown away by most every time.