For Love and Life Vol. 1


Leído por LibriVox Volunteers

(3.7 stars; 3 reviews)

“The device on his shield was a young oak tree pulled up by the roots, with the Spanish word Desdichado, signifying Disinherited.” The novel opens with Mrs. Murray walking with two of her grandchildren along the banks of Loch Arroch in the Scottish border country. They appear to be well-to-do and distinguished, but all is not well within the family and sacrifices are necessary. - Summary by Lynne Thompson (8 hr 13 min)

Capítulos

On the Shores of Loch Arroch 22:07 Leído por Jim Locke
Edgar 24:51 Leído por Matea Bracic
Jeanie 22:45 Leído por Jim Locke
A Family Consultation 21:00 Leído por TR Love
The Family Martyr 26:45 Leído por Justin Hew
A Party in a Parlour 22:39 Leído por Ryan Williams
Gentility 19:10 Leído por madcappe
A Railway Journey: The Scotch Express 23:14 Leído por davidholmesvoice
Alone 21:45 Leído por torre435
A Noble Patron 20:21 Leído por madcappe
Waiting for a Situation 19:24 Leído por madcappe
Disappointment 18:05 Leído por madcappe
A new Friend 21:44 Leído por madcappe
The Enchanted Palace 19:42 Leído por Jim Locke
Reality 29:03 Leído por davidholmesvoice
A Pair of Philanthropists 20:28 Leído por davidholmesvoice
The Shop 23:40 Leído por littlemissclumsy
Two Culprits on their Trial 26:02 Leído por Jim Locke
Schemes and Speculations 21:17 Leído por Jim Locke
The Village 18:44 Leído por Jim Locke
Wisdom and Foolishness 22:49 Leído por davidholmesvoice
The Opposite Camp 27:30 Leído por Jim Locke

Reseñas

Jim Locke is THE WORST LIBIVOX READER


(1 stars)

This book might be worth a listen - however - the reader Jim Locke ruins it. I have listened to around 500 books and short stories on LibriVox over the last five years and I have encountered Mr. Locke's readings many times. He is a prolific contributor and he is hard to avoid if one plays as many readings as I have. His delivery is wooden and given in a monotone without any trace of emotion. I find his work as appealing as the sound emitted by a fingernail scratching a blackboard. This work, as I stated in my first sentence, may indeed be worth listening to. I am skipping Mr. Locke's chapters; maybe his monotone will put me to sleep.