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Bonnie Prince Charlie: a Tale of Fontenoy and Culloden

Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers

(4,412 Sterne; 57 Bewertungen)

This is a tale of the son of a Scottish officer, who gets arrested for helping a Jacobite agent. Set during the Jacobite rebellion in Scotland in 1755, the boy escapes and makes it to France and shares some adventures with Prince Charlie. - Summary by Ann Boulais (9 hr 55 min)

Chapters

The Return of a Prodigal

32:18

Read by Ryan Cherrick

The Jacobite Agent

33:29

Read by Ryan Cherrick

Free

27:21

Read by Ryan Cherrick

In France

28:37

Read by Ryan Cherrick

Dettingen

29:37

Read by Ryan Cherrick

The Convent of Our Lady

31:32

Read by Rachel

Mother!

30:26

Read by Adele de Pignerolles

Hidden Foes

20:31

Read by Rachel

Fontenoy

31:06

Read by Adele de Pignerolles

A Perilous Journey

31:51

Read by Adele de Pignerolles

Free

31:15

Read by Rachel

The End of the Quarrel

31:48

Read by Rachel

Prince Charles

35:26

Read by Rachel

Prestonpans

28:44

Read by Rachel

A Mission

28:31

Read by Rachel

The March to Derby

32:54

Read by Rachel

A Baffled Plot

29:06

Read by Rachel

Culloden

31:37

Read by Bria Snow

Fugitives

30:23

Read by Adele de Pignerolles

Happy Days

19:12

Read by Ryan Cherrick

Bewertungen

(4 Sterne)

A good story. Mostly well read, but my heart does tend to sink when I read the words 'read by librivox volunteers'. Some chapters difficult to follow.

(4,5 Sterne)

really enjoyed this book. and although all who participated in reading t he book did a great Job (especially Rachael) i would have preferred less change overs in the readers.

Average, but entertaining Henty

(4 Sterne)

This book was an average, but entertaining Henty novel. it has most of the Henty qualities and was enjoyable to listen to. recommend!

NEVER TRUST LOUIS

(4,5 Sterne)

The first Hanoverian rulers were assuredly poor ones, but one shudders to even consider the consequences to England (indeed, to the world) if the papist Stuarts had secured the throne as virtual puppets of France. The book presents a sane look at the events from the viewpoint of a nominal Jacobite.

It started out well.

(3 Sterne)

It started out well then the readers changed to one child and one adolescent. It just turned me off.