What's Wrong With the World
G. K. Chesterton
Leído por LibriVox Volunteers





Gilbert Keith Chesterton (1874–1936) has been called the “prince of paradox.” Time magazine observed of his writing style: “Whenever possible Chesterton made his points with popular sayings, proverbs, allegories—first carefully turning them inside out.” His prolific and diverse output included journalism, philosophy, poetry, biography, Christian apologetics, fantasy and detective fiction.
The title of Chesteron’s 1910 collection of essays was inspired by a title given to him two years earlier by The Times newspaper, which had asked a number of authors to write on the topic: “What’s wrong with the world?”. Chesterton’s answer at that time was the shortest of those submitted - he simply wrote: “Dear Sirs, I am. Sincerely yours, G.K. Chesterton”. In this collection he gives a fuller treatment of the question, with his characteristic conservative wit. (Summary by Wikipedia and Carl Manchester) (7 hr 4 min)
Capítulos
Dedication | 3:02 | Leído por LibertusMaximus |
The Medical Mistake | 7:43 | Leído por LibertusMaximus |
Wanted, an Unpractical Man | 10:29 | Leído por LibertusMaximus |
The New Hypocrite | 13:06 | Leído por Jordan |
The Fear of the Past | 9:22 | Leído por dlorimer |
The Unfinished Temple | 12:06 | Leído por Jordan |
The Enemies of Property | 9:51 | Leído por pattymarie |
The Free Family | 8:05 | Leído por Jeannie |
The Wildness of Domesticity | 8:54 | Leído por Zloot |
History of Hudge and Gudge | 11:03 | Leído por Craig Campbell |
Oppression by Optimism | 6:36 | Leído por Houldsworth1 |
The Homelessness of Jones | 9:21 | Leído por Houldsworth1 |
The Charm of Jingoism | 8:21 | Leído por Craig Campbell |
Wisdom and the Weather | 14:12 | Leído por davevoelker |
The Common Vision | 7:11 | Leído por Jeannie |
The Insane Necessity | 14:37 | Leído por Zloot |
The Unmilitary Sufragette | 6:50 | Leído por Houldsworth1 |
The Universal Stick | 13:55 | Leído por dlorimer |
The Emancipation of Domesticity | 10:06 | Leído por NickNumber |
The Romance of Thrift | 11:36 | Leído por Anne Cheng |
The Coldness of Chloe | 8:35 | Leído por von |
The Pedant and the Savage | 6:24 | Leído por von |
The Modern Surrender of Woman | 8:03 | Leído por pattymarie |
The Brand of the Fleur-de-Lys | 6:42 | Leído por von |
Sincerity and the Gallows | 6:49 | Leído por Craig Campbell |
The Higher Anarchy | 8:25 | Leído por Ransom |
The Queen and the Suffragettes | 3:44 | Leído por Ransom |
The Modern Slave | 7:12 | Leído por Ransom |
The Calvanism of To-day | 5:20 | Leído por Gary Gilberd |
The Tribal Terror | 5:59 | Leído por Gary Gilberd |
The Tricks of Environment | 4:35 | Leído por breathe |
The Truth About Education | 6:03 | Leído por breathe |
An Evil Cry | 6:25 | Leído por breathe |
Authority the Unavoidable | 10:02 | Leído por Craig Campbell |
The Humility of Mrs Grundy | 8:15 | Leído por von |
The Broken Rainbow | 11:04 | Leído por valli |
The Need for Narrowness | 5:11 | Leído por von |
The Case for Public Schools | 15:47 | Leído por valli |
The School for Hypocrites | 12:32 | Leído por Craig Campbell |
The Staleness of the New Schools | 6:42 | Leído por Jeannie |
The Outlawed Parent | 7:20 | Leído por Craig Campbell |
Folly and Female Education | 8:26 | Leído por Alana Jordan |
The Empire of the Insect | 14:17 | Leído por David Barnes |
The Fallacy of the Umbrella Stand | 8:34 | Leído por Raerity |
The Dreadful Duty of Gudge | 6:16 | Leído por Craig Campbell |
A Last Instance | 2:34 | Leído por Jeannie |
Conclusion | 8:45 | Leído por Jeannie |
Three Notes | 8:06 | Leído por Alana Jordan |
Reseñas
Well-written





Dr. A
This is a fascinating and well-reasoned book, but likely to raise eyebrows or perhaps even blood pressure, particularly if it is read shallowly. Here Chesterton speaks out for justice and reform. Here he defends the traditional family and speaks with immense respect for women and for not forcing them into the same mold as men. Here he says, "With the red hair of one she-urchin in the gutter I will set fire to all modern civilization."
A bold and fitting title to a true classic





Tim
Switch around a few words and you could read parts of this in any news outlet. The hypocrisy of the capitalist and socialist is spelt out in clear and common terms. every chapter should be read and reflected upon then read again until each term is properly understood. A treasure of information awaits the reader on what, where and why a family is. If you must skip the whole thing read the conclusion, it provides a true summary of what is, a truly great and highly philosophical text.





POgeto
I’ve read this book and listened to its reading several times and guess what, It’s always new. I always get new insights; it’s almost like reading for the first time every time. Or like it’s been rewritten since the last time I read it. 😅
Part 4 chapter 10 is very badly read...





A LibriVox Listener





A LibriVox Listener
Overall the reading was excellently done, but there were two chapters read with an accent so thick I couldn't understand them and had to skip over them! Other than that issue, a quality recording of a quality book.





Ms. Elizabeth
He's just too smart for me. I think I will need to read several times to understand.





t
A wise critique is a critique that is still relevant. 100 years later.
Technically difficult





Phxjennifer
I found this interesting group of essays difficult to listen to primarily because of the wild variations in volume from one narrator to another. One woman was so quiet that I simply couldn't turn it up enough, even wearing earphones. The essays themselves were certainly thought-provoking, particularly those on women. I will have to find out more about the author. Was he just a product of his place and time?