Show Boat


Leído por LibriVox Volunteers

(2.5 stars; 11 reviews)

Published in 1926, Show Boat tells of three generations of the Hawks-Ravenal family and the Cotton Blossom Floating Palace Theatre on the Mississippi and other rivers, from the Reconstruction Era of the 1880s, to the Gilded Age and Roaring Twenties. The story was made into a Broadway musical in 1927 and into films (both a silent film and a partial "talkie") in 1929.

NOTE: There are issues of race in the story, particularly anti-Black stereotypes and derogatory terms. It is LibriVox's policy to record texts as written. - Summary by TriciaG (10 hr 57 min)

Capítulos

Chapter 1 45:25 Leído por docdlmartin
Chapter 2 38:17 Leído por Olivia Mazzone
Chapter 3 26:52 Leído por docdlmartin
Chapter 4 31:14 Leído por docdlmartin
Chapter 5 48:31 Leído por docdlmartin
Chapter 6 48:36 Leído por FloraMetrick
Chapter 7 30:41 Leído por FloraMetrick
Chapter 8 32:19 Leído por FloraMetrick
Chapter 9 45:11 Leído por FloraMetrick
Chapter 10 38:51 Leído por FloraMetrick
Chapter 11 38:57 Leído por FloraMetrick
Chapter 12 14:56 Leído por Krista Zaleski
Chapter 13 31:55 Leído por FloraMetrick
Chapter 14 37:31 Leído por FloraMetrick
Chapter 15 23:23 Leído por Yoganandh T
Chapter 16 40:29 Leído por FloraMetrick
Chapter 17 32:13 Leído por Jay Randolph
Chapter 18 24:53 Leído por KimberlyB
Chapter 19 27:11 Leído por FloraMetrick

Reseñas

Robotic Reader, Couldn't Listen


(1 stars)

I had been hoping this title would be added. Imagine my disappointment when I couldn't even finish the first chapter. The reader on that chapter and many others, was so monotone and robotic sounding I truly couldn't listen. I know they are volunteers, but perhaps a trial chapter could be proof listened before an entire book is done?


(5 stars)

If Flora Metrick could have narrated the whole book it would have been great. KimberlyB and Jay Randolph did really well readings. I really liked the story itself. Thank you LibriVox for bringing the book to us. I was able to overlook the distasteful terms about Blacks because that is the way they were treated back then. Today we have better sense hopefully.


(1 stars)

Please ban this reader from volunteering