In Old Plantation Days
Paul Laurence Dunbar
Lu par Jim Locke





With this collection of short stories, Dunbar sought to draw on the success of his dialect poems by recreating and portraying the southern plantation during slavery. The stories focus on the stereotypical portrait of slaves as obedient workers happy to spend their lives in service of their benevolent owner. His attempt to find success was only partially realized, as his stories drew not only criticism but, in some cases, anger at their very stereotypical nature. The book itself, however, proved to be more lucrative than previous fiction works had been for the author. (Summary by Special Collections and Archives, Wright State University) (5 hr 46 min)
Chapitres
Aunt Tempe's Triumph | 12:57 | Lu par Jim Locke |
Aunt Tempe's Revenge | 14:52 | Lu par Jim Locke |
The Walls of Jericho | 14:51 | Lu par Jim Locke |
How Brother Parker Fell from Grace | 14:04 | Lu par Jim Locke |
The Trousers | 12:49 | Lu par Jim Locke |
The Last Fiddling of Mordaunt's Jim | 14:52 | Lu par Jim Locke |
A Supper by Proxy | 14:35 | Lu par Jim Locke |
The Trouble about Sophiny | 12:18 | Lu par Jim Locke |
Mr. Groby's Slippery Gift | 12:24 | Lu par Jim Locke |
Ash-Cake Hannah and Her Ben | 13:58 | Lu par Jim Locke |
Dizzy-Headed Dick | 11:57 | Lu par Jim Locke |
The Conjuring Contest | 12:43 | Lu par Jim Locke |
Dandy Jim's Conjure Scare | 11:42 | Lu par Jim Locke |
The Memory of Martha | 14:04 | Lu par Jim Locke |
Who Stands for the Gods | 10:46 | Lu par Jim Locke |
A Lady Slipper | 14:28 | Lu par Jim Locke |
A Blessed Deceit | 13:58 | Lu par Jim Locke |
The Brief Cure of Aunt Fanny | 15:09 | Lu par Jim Locke |
The Stanton Coachman | 12:10 | Lu par Jim Locke |
The Easter Wedding | 10:32 | Lu par Jim Locke |
The Finding of Martha | 25:28 | Lu par Jim Locke |
The Defection of Maria Ann Gibbs | 15:33 | Lu par Jim Locke |
The Judgment of Paris | 16:01 | Lu par Jim Locke |
Silent Sam'el | 12:27 | Lu par Jim Locke |
The Way of a Woman | 11:37 | Lu par Jim Locke |
Critiques
could have had a better reader





Suzanne
I give the reader credit for volunteering, but he reads in a dreadful monotone, varied occasionally by a sing song, and he stumbled and bumbled with the dialect so that at times what he was reading was unintelligible. These stories are a glimpse into how white folk viewed the lives of their slaves, but listening to this reader was so difficult that I gave up.
Unbearable





Cape Codder
I cannot comment on the content, as I never was able to listen to an appreciable amount of it; the reason - the reader. Bless him for volunteering, but he is positively unbearable to listen to!





A LibriVox Listener
I did read/listen to the end. Happy to say I enjoy and identify with all the characters. Congratulations, author, may Karma have eased your road.