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The Adventures of Gerard

Gelesen von Phil Griffiths

(4,578 Sterne; 173 Bewertungen)

These lesser known stories were penned by Conan Doyle during the period between killing off Sherlock Holmes in 1893 and reluctantly resurrecting him some ten years later. The swashbuckling, eponymous hero, Etienne Gerard, is one of Napoleon's gallant French Hussars, who considers himself the finest of them all. Through these "Boys Own Adventures", Conan Doyle pokes gentle fun at both the French and the English. This is the second volume containing eight adventures. (Summary by Phil) (6 hr 43 min)

Chapters

00 - Preface

2:37

Read by Phil Griffiths

01 - How Brigadier Gerard Lost His Ear, Part 1

20:26

Read by Phil Griffiths

02 - How Brigadier Gerard Lost His Ear, Part 2

16:06

Read by Phil Griffiths

03 - How Brigadier Gerard Lost His Ear, Part 3

13:13

Read by Phil Griffiths

04 - How the Brigadier Captured Saragossa, Part 1

20:16

Read by Phil Griffiths

05 - How the Brigadier Captured Saragossa, Part 2

14:41

Read by Phil Griffiths

06 - How the Brigadier Captured Saragossa, Part 3

16:00

Read by Phil Griffiths

07 - How the Brigadier Slew the Fox, Part 1

16:45

Read by Phil Griffiths

08 - How the Brigadier Slew the Fox, Part 2

17:11

Read by Phil Griffiths

09 - How the Brigadier Saved the Army, Part 1

16:57

Read by Phil Griffiths

10 - How the Brigadier Saved the Army, Part 2

18:09

Read by Phil Griffiths

11 - How the Brigadier Saved the Army, Part 3

17:27

Read by Phil Griffiths

12 - How the Brigadier Triumphed in England, Part 1

21:56

Read by Phil Griffiths

13 - How the Brigadier Triumphed in England, Part 2

19:04

Read by Phil Griffiths

14 - How the Brigadier Rode to Minsk, Part 1

16:18

Read by Phil Griffiths

15 - How the Brigadier Rode to Minsk, Part 2

14:48

Read by Phil Griffiths

16 - How the Brigadier Rode to Minsk, Part 3

15:18

Read by Phil Griffiths

17 - How the Brigadier Bore Himself at Waterloo, Part 1

15:32

Read by Phil Griffiths

18 - How the Brigadier Bore Himself at Waterloo, Part 2

15:00

Read by Phil Griffiths

19 - How the Brigadier Bore Himself at Waterloo, Part 3

13:26

Read by Phil Griffiths

20 - How the Brigadier Bore Himself at Waterloo, Part 4

20:11

Read by Phil Griffiths

21 - How the Brigadier Bore Himself at Waterloo, Part 5

15:03

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22 - How the Brigadier Bore Himself at Waterloo, Part 6

13:27

Read by Phil Griffiths

23 - The Last Adventure of the Brigadier, Part 1

16:13

Read by Phil Griffiths

24 - The Last Adventure of the Brigadier, Part 2

17:49

Read by Phil Griffiths

Bewertungen

SURPRISE

(4,5 Sterne)

The reviewers seemdisgruntled that they are unable to determine if the book is a satire or an adventure. I see it as a gentle satire of our grandfathers or our old uncle whose memories are a bit unsteady as they pass along stories of their youth. The snows were deeper, the winters colder, the hunts more perilous, etc. Gerrard no doubt took part in all (or most) of the adventures, but his fading memory perhaps assigns him bigger roles than actually existed. Read these stories in that light and just enjoy them at face value.

OK not great

(3 Sterne)

Not Doyle's greatest works but found it very humorous and reader kept me listening. I listened to both of Doyle's books on Gerard's adventures and I think this character was funnier than serious and agree with mikezane author didn't do a very good job on adventure or satire. Reader did a great job of selling the story and kept me on boatd.

This is an okay book

(3 Sterne)

I can see why the public wanted Doyle to bring back Holmes. His other books are pretty pale in comparison. Gerard is a French colonel who woos his ladies and kills his enemies with equal vigor. He rather reminds me of Pepe LePew, a bit full of himself. These stories chronicle his adventures in the French army under Napoleon Bonaparte. I think Doyle got confused with this storyline. He wasn't sure if he wanted adventure or satire, and as a result, he did neither very well, just okay. The reader is fine, no issues.

Bravo from Bormeo

(4 Sterne)

This is a delightful, lighthearted series of tales exploring the life and daring-do of a French Hussar Brigadier. Our protagonist exhibits many fine qualities engendered by his status, but he is also audacious and quite self-admiring, which actually makes him an endearing character. The tales are wonderfully read by Phil Griffiths who has the perfect voice and cadence for this book. Hussar! !

(3 Sterne)

Not my favourite book by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle but it is interesting enough to keep me listening. Compliments to the reader, he did a good job!

Comic

(4 Sterne)

Doyle may have considered this among his serious work, but it’s really a light satire. Well read.

(4 Sterne)

proof that Doyle has a sense of humor. Dry monotone reading though

(5 Sterne)

Amazing as always. My 4th listen through in about 6 years.