Witching Hill


Lu par Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)

(4.2 stars; 59 reviews)

The adventures of two young men, which may or may not have to do with the supernatural. - Summary by Nicholas Clifford (5 hr 56 min)

Chapitres

Unhallowed Ground 45:50 Lu par Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)
The House with Red Blinds 50:50 Lu par Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)
A Vicious Circle 40:25 Lu par Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)
The Local Colour 46:16 Lu par Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)
The Angel of Life 39:45 Lu par Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)
Under Arms 43:25 Lu par Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)
The Locked Room 50:13 Lu par Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)
The Temple of Bacchus 40:13 Lu par Nicholas Clifford (1930-2019)

Critiques

Read as short stories


(4.5 stars)

I listened to this book twice and found it much more satisfying to think of each chapter as a separate story with some overlapping characters. Otherwise, there is little or no continuity to this "book". The reader, Nicholas Clifford, could have recorded the dictionary and I would have listened to it...his voice was like warm honey dripping off the pages. Very sorry to read of his passing a few years back, he is truly missed in the Libravox community.

A charming oldfashioned story


(3 stars)

It took another turn from what I had thought it would at first. Well read.

Rest In Peace


(5 stars)

You will be missed, Mr. Clifford. I hope you are reading this in heaven…

A lovely story of friendship


(5 stars)

Hey Jim of the story of friendship. Well narrated.


(5 stars)

Professor Clifford you are sorely missed snd are gone too soon. ❤️

I loved it.


(4 stars)

I was totally taken on a journey and apart from the reader's struggle to pronounce some of the place names and vernacular correctly, I still went with him. The obvious physical attraction between the two main characters was tantalising and the love they shared was touching.


(3 stars)

Some great mysterious stories in here, however the overall plot was a little sprawling. It has a very abrupt and underwhelming ending, leaving the reader no better off than at the beginning. Excellent reading from Clifford, as ever.


(3 stars)

Great reading but… am I the only one getting annoyed with the mouse clicking through the pages?