A Daughter of Today
Sara Jeannette Duncan
Lu par Bruce Pirie





The Canadian author Sara Jeannette Duncan (aka Mrs. Everard Cotes) is today best known for her 1904 novel of Ontario life, “The Imperialist” (also available as a LibriVox recording), but in Duncan’s own time readers were impressed more by her other works, including “A Daughter of Today,” published in 1894.
“A Daughter of Today” follows the story of Elfrida Bell, a young woman who escapes the American Midwest to pursue first an artistic education in Paris, and then a novice career in journalism in London. As the novel’s title indicates, Elfrida is a product “of today,” i.e., of her day — the 1890s. She is swept up in the heady notions of that period: Aestheticism (“art for art’s sake”), fin-de-siècle Decadence, and ideas about the “New Woman” who breaks free of bourgeois conventions. With the self-absorption of youth, Elfrida sets about constructing herself along these lines. She pursues this project with bracing energy, mixed with pretension and affectation: “In nothing that she said or did, admired or condemned, was there any trace of the commonplace, except, perhaps, the desire to avoid it.” Early reviewers debated whether the character of Elfrida was “fresh and original,” or simply “ill-bred.”
This novel explores clashes between convention and originality, cultural differences (American /French /British), and rivalry between friends. - Summary by Bruce Pirie (10 hr 17 min)
Chapitres
Chapter 1 | 18:30 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 2 | 24:00 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 3 | 24:54 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 4 | 21:06 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 5 | 12:00 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 6 | 19:36 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 7 | 16:41 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 8 | 16:07 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 9 | 14:28 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 10 | 20:25 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 11 | 29:05 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 12 | 20:28 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 13 | 21:05 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 14 | 21:20 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 15 | 12:10 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 16 | 20:04 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 17 | 18:05 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 18 | 6:14 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 19 | 17:17 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 20 | 10:08 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 21 | 14:18 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 22 | 17:44 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 23 | 15:43 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 24 | 27:44 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 25 | 18:20 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 26 | 17:40 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 27 | 17:54 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 28 | 14:36 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 29 | 5:01 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 30 | 25:22 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 31 | 20:47 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 32 | 8:42 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 33 | 14:27 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 34 | 20:09 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Chapter 35 | 15:33 | Lu par Bruce Pirie |
Critiques
kam





Kam
when a book is read by this reader, it makes for a superb tension to enjoy this authors clever and interesting approach to their writing style. worth a listen though somewhat philosophical.