Sir Gibbie
George MacDonald
Lu par LibriVox Volunteers





These are the adventures of Sir Gibbie through the Scotland moors. Not being able to read or speak, Gibbie survives on the streets without a mother and having an alcoholic father. Yet, he wins the hearts of his neighbors and helps others. Children and adults learn through Sir Gibbie self-sacrifice, honesty, and purity. (Summary by Maggie Travers) (18 hr 1 min)
Chapitres
The Earring | 12:35 | Lu par Mary Ann Weathers |
Sir George | 14:47 | Lu par Mary Ann Weathers |
Mistress Croale | 13:45 | Lu par Mary Ann Weathers |
The Parlour | 19:47 | Lu par Taysha Lynn |
Gibbie's Calling | 15:43 | Lu par Taysha Lynn |
A Sunday at Home | 36:10 | Lu par Taysha Lynn |
The Town-Sparrow | 16:48 | Lu par Mark Hissong |
Sambo | 22:17 | Lu par Mark Hissong |
Adrift | 27:22 | Lu par Hannah Mary |
The Barn | 17:15 | Lu par Anna Roberts |
Janet | 22:30 | Lu par Maggie Travers |
Glashgar | 15:34 | Lu par Tony Addison |
The Ceiling | 8:51 | Lu par Maggie Travers |
Hornie | 22:50 | Lu par Hannah Mary |
Donal Grant | 9:46 | Lu par Mark Penfold |
Apprenticeship | 9:19 | Lu par Liz Loomans |
Secret Service | 12:23 | Lu par Hannah Mary |
The Broonie | 14:20 | Lu par Hannah Mary |
The Laird | 20:02 | Lu par Hannah Mary |
The Ambush | 15:14 | Lu par Jeremybuttler |
The Punishment | 26:08 | Lu par Jeremybuttler |
Refuge | 27:03 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
More Schooling | 20:55 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
The Slate | 16:27 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
Rumours | 17:15 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
The Gamekeeper | 29:12 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
A Voice | 10:36 | Lu par Amarlie |
The Wisdom of the Wise | 10:08 | Lu par Hannah Mary |
The Beast-Boy | 21:53 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
The Lorrie Meadow | 18:05 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
Their Reward | 13:08 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
Prologue | 17:48 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
The Mains | 29:12 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
Glashruach | 22:08 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
The Whelp | 13:45 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
The Brander | 22:40 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
Mr. Sclater | 10:43 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
The Muckle Hoose | 13:32 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
Daur Street | 18:00 | Lu par Hannah Mary |
Mrs. Sclater | 15:48 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
Initiation | 8:30 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
Donal's Lodging | 32:16 | Lu par Hannah Mary |
The Minister's Defeat | 17:19 | Lu par Hannah Mary |
The Sinner | 24:13 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
Shoals Ahead | 15:37 | Lu par Hannah Mary |
The Girls | 17:46 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
A Lesson of Wisdom | 10:35 | Lu par Mark Penfold |
Needfull Odds and Ends | 25:10 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
The Houseless | 13:21 | Lu par Twinkle |
A Walk | 25:03 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
The North Church | 12:42 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
The Quarry | 22:35 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
A Night-Watch | 17:16 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
Of Age | 13:22 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
Ten Auld Hoose O' Galbraith | 11:45 | Lu par Mary Ann Weathers |
The Laird and the Preacher | 10:11 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
A Hiding-Place from the Wind | 15:04 | Lu par Maggie Travers |
The Confession | 12:55 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
Catastrophe | 16:00 | Lu par Devorah Allen |
Arrangement and Preparation | 9:58 | Lu par Mark Penfold |
The Wedding | 14:30 | Lu par Hannah Mary |
The Burn | 14:02 | Lu par Hannah Mary |
Critiques





SC Nanny
What a lovely, imaginative story. If only there were people like “Sir Gibbie” - what a wonderful world it would be. I thoroughly enjoyed this book.I give it 5 stars although the site does not appear to quite fill in the last star for some reason.
Thankful for Sir Gibbie





Chris
I really enjoyed "Sir Gibbie." I'd heard about it being one of MacDonald's best "non-fantasy" books for a while and was glad to see the LibriVox community take it one. The readers did a wonderful job--thanks to each one of you! And the story itself was captivating. Never a real "page turner" (though the climax of the second third of the tale was pretty intense), MacDonald's story still drew me in and I was involved in the character's lives....learning from them and intrigued to see what the author had in store for them.....I actually didn't see the ending coming and was pleasantly surprised!
Sir Gibbie: Fully Alive





RMColson
Sir Gibbie is a picture of a child, a boy, and a young man fully alive. The readers for the most part did an amazing job bringing the story and words to life. George MacDonald portrays a heart responsive to grace and mercy. Sir Gibbie is a picture of what a person fully alive in God’s grace. We may say Sir Gibbie is someone we should aspire to live like but is not attainable. I think George McDonald is saying let us all live like Gibbie and we will find out whether it is attainable or not. Gibbie was a human fully alive!
Beautiful Tale





Connor Dykes
Having only read the Princess and the Goblin and its sequel among George MacDonald's fiction, this is more of the same inspiring goodness, in the full and classical and Christian sense of the word. Gibbie is a figure of purity that would be pitiable were he not so earnest and joyous, and serves as a wonderful role model for selfless yet childlike goodwill. great story for all ages though is less fitting for children than the Princess and the Goblin books. I look forward to reading the sequel Donal Grant, who was a great character in this one and the one I most identified with.
Lovely Story





Annika Matson
After listening to other books and getting frustrated with the main character being 'overly perfect' I wondered, 'What is so different about Sir Gibbie?' I just loved him right from the start! I think the reason is that, instead of being the model of a 'perfect Christian' he is, instead, a type of Christ, who is the model for what a Christian should be like. This book has a lot of Scots in it, but I got used to it as the book went on. Most of the readers are excellent, Esp. Devorah Allen and Hannah Mary. Thanks for making this available! So inspiring 💕





Elsie Reads
Great story. Even though George MacDonald's theology is not completely sound it is evident his love of Jesus is real. Gibbie is an unreal human being with a nature more akin to a pre-fall condition of man than after. Donal seems more real because of his weakness than Gibbie but it is an inspiring tale non the less.





A LibriVox Listener
This book is fantastic. So many gems of wisdom, truth, goodness, and beauty throughout each chapter. There were several chapters that were quite difficult to understand due to a change of reader, but the majority of readers were fine and even relayed a delightful Scottish accent.
Echoes of so many themes





Stuart Gathmam
There is a little of "The Gods must be Crazy". Janet could be Curdie's mother in "The Princess and the Goblin". Greed undermining wealth. Alcoholism is vividly portrayed, but unlike with Pansy, Prohibition is not a cure.