Literary Lapses


Leído por TriciaG

(4.1 stars; 11 reviews)

Short sketches relating the humourous side of life in 1910. "Professor Leacock has made more people laugh with the written word than any other living author. One may say he is one of the greatest jesters, the greatest humorist of the age." – A. P. Herbert (Summary by TriciaG and Wikipedia) (4 hr 40 min)

Capítulos

01 - My Financial Career 6:04 Leído por TriciaG
02 - Lord Oxhead's Secret 13:46 Leído por TriciaG
03 - Boarding-house Geometry 2:21 Leído por TriciaG
04 - The Awful Fate of Melpomenus Jones 6:13 Leído por TriciaG
05 - A Christmas Letter 2:39 Leído por TriciaG
06 - How to Make a Million Dollars 8:56 Leído por TriciaG
07 - How to Live to Be 200 7:49 Leído por TriciaG
08 - How to Avoid Getting Married 7:23 Leído por TriciaG
09 - How to Be a Doctor 9:10 Leído por TriciaG
10 - The New Food 2:54 Leído por TriciaG
11 - A New Pathology 8:28 Leído por TriciaG
12 - The Poet Answered 2:24 Leído por TriciaG
13 - The Force of Statistics 3:02 Leído por TriciaG
14 - Men Who Have Shaved Me 9:24 Leído por TriciaG
15 - Getting the Thread of It 7:17 Leído por TriciaG
16 - Telling His Faults 2:50 Leído por TriciaG
17 - Winter Pastimes 8:36 Leído por TriciaG
18 - Number Fifty-Six 14:48 Leído por TriciaG
19 - Aristocratic Education 4:49 Leído por TriciaG
20 - The Conjurer's Revenge 5:02 Leído por TriciaG
21 - Hints to Travellers 5:51 Leído por TriciaG
22 - A Manual of Education 5:07 Leído por TriciaG
23 - Hoodoo McFiggin's Christmas 6:48 Leído por TriciaG
24 - The Life of John Smith 8:38 Leído por TriciaG
25 - On Collecting Things 6:04 Leído por TriciaG
26 - Society Chit-Chat 6:54 Leído por TriciaG
27 - Insurance Up to Date 3:26 Leído por TriciaG
28 - Borrowing a Match 3:11 Leído por TriciaG
29 - A Lesson in Fiction 7:55 Leído por TriciaG
30 - Helping the Armenians 2:46 Leído por TriciaG
31 - A Study in Still Life: The Country Hotel 3:51 Leído por TriciaG
32 - An Experiment with Policeman Hogan 12:16 Leído por TriciaG
33 - The Passing of the Poet 12:13 Leído por TriciaG
34 - Self-Made Men 6:44 Leído por TriciaG
35 - A Model Dialogue 3:13 Leído por TriciaG
36 - Back to the Bush 11:03 Leído por TriciaG
37 - Reflections on Riding 4:26 Leído por TriciaG
38 - Saloonio 6:44 Leído por TriciaG
39 - Half-Hours with the Poets 15:43 Leído por TriciaG
40 - A, B, and C 11:35 Leído por TriciaG
41 - Acknowledgments 1:53 Leído por TriciaG

Reseñas

Can't Take It.


(2 stars)

The reader has a hypnotizing way of intoning all of her sentences the same way. She weirdly extends the last word of each phrase and raises her pitch a bit, in a way no one would do in natural speech. Pretty soon I'm listening to that pattern and can't focus on the words of the story.

Laugh out loud funny, on a regular basis


(5 stars)

The book didn't click for me, until about chapter 4. Not so much because of the readin, which is good or excellent depending on the reader, but because...well I don't know. It took me a little while to "get" the author. I mention this only to suggest to you that if you are listening to this and just don't get it, give it a little time. It really is excellent once you click to it. (His politics regarding the Armenians are abominable, though.)

So Relevant


(4.5 stars)

Stephen Leacock should be enshrined alongside, but slightly to the right and 1/4", lower, as Twain. He beats Twain out for sheer ridiculousness, and laughably mean insanity. His writings are fresh and modern. If Twain is The epitome of American humor, Mtr. Leacock is certainly Canada's

TricaG is great!


(5 stars)

For the first couple of stories, TriciaG didn't impress me. Then I 'got' her. Her reading is a wonderful combination of innocence and irony. Perfectly suited to Leacock's work. Hope she reads more of his stories. I've listened to her reading of Lapses many times.

Raycyst


(5 stars)

These stories, read by a great narrator, are whimsical and funny. Therein lays the problem. Whimsey is now out of favor. All the math jokes need to be replaced with observation on how Texans hate black folks.

Excellent


(4 stars)

Great humour! The reading is steady and competently, with a curious intonation well suited to the book.