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The Unholy Three
Read by Ben Tucker
Tod Robbins





Favourite Chapters Collection 002
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
Various





The Early Adventures of Don Everhard
Read by Ben Tucker
Gordon Young





Lenz
Read by Rolf Kaiser
Georg Büchner





Dulcamara
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
Howard Saxby
This is a collection of poetry and prose by Howard Saxby. These pieces are the sort of stories and poems that can be enjoyed by children bec…
Hector Berlioz; A Romantic Tragedy
Read by David Wales
Herbert Francis Peyser





Bashan And I
Read by David Wales
Thomas Mann





Tim Bobbin: A View of the Lancashire Dialect
Read by Phil Benson
Various
A comic dialogue written in John Collier's idiosyncratic version of the 18th century South Lancashire dialect together with a collection of …
Curiosities of Literature, Vol. 1
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
Isaac D'Israeli





A Book of Scoundrels
Read by Greg Lewin
Charles Whibley





Jeremy At Crale; His Friends, His Ambitions And His One Great Enemy
Read by David Wales
Hugh Walpole
This 1927 work is the third and final in Walpole’s Jeremy series. (The others are Jeremy and Jeremy And Hamlet.) Jeremy’s home is in Polches…
Le Docteur Lerne, sous-dieu
Read by Isad
Maurice Renard





Get Next!
Read by Laurie Banza
Hugh Mchugh





The Cabinet Minister
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
Arthur Wing Pinero
Mr. Pinero holds that farce should treat of probable people placed in possible circumstances, but regarded from a point of view which exagge…
The Man of Feeling
Read by Jim Locke
Henry Mackenzie
A man of refined taste, who caught the tone of the French sentiment of his time, has, of course, pleased French critics, and has been transl…
Short Nonfiction Collection, Vol. 097
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
Various
"One does not care to walk over a rug or carpet that displays a scene in perspective, neither does one wish to gaze into a landscape wr…
Schetsen van Boz
Read by Marcel Coenders
Charles Dickens





Short Nonfiction Collection, Vol. 102
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
Various
"It is difficult for the human mind to take a comprehensive view of a subject." This is how librarian Arthur Bostwick begins his e…