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An Undisturbed Peace
- A Novel
- By: Mary Glickman
- Narrated by: Alex Hyde White
- Length: 11 hrs and 42 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
This sweeping historical novel tells the story of the Trail of Tears as it has never been told before. Abrahan Bento Sassaporta Naggar has traveled to America from the filthy streets of East London in search of a better life. But Abe's visions of a privileged apprenticeship in the Sassaporta Brothers' empire are soon replaced with the grim reality of indentured servitude in Greensborough, North Carolina. Some 50 miles west, Dark Water of the Mountains leads a life of irreverent solitude.
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An Undisturbed Peace is strong and powerful
- By Bree on 11-24-17
- An Undisturbed Peace
- A Novel
- By: Mary Glickman
- Narrated by: Alex Hyde White
A pitiful story made long by poor reading
Reviewed: 11-22-17
The story provided only brief glimpses into the national tragedy inflicted by the American government on American Indians. Appropriately but inadequately, the story unwound about two individuals in an interracial marriage and an outsider's interaction with them.
The story however was rendered laborious and less effective by the monotonous, expressionless delivery.
Maybe just reading the story instead of listening would be better? I’m afraid not.
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Ireland
- By: Frank Delaney
- Narrated by: Frank Delaney
- Length: 19 hrs and 29 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
One evening in 1951, an itinerant storyteller arrives unannounced at a house in the Irish countryside. In exchange for a bed and a warm meal, he invites his hosts and their neighbors to join him by the wintry fireside and begins to tell formative stories of Ireland's history. Ronan, a nine-year-old boy, grows so entranced by the storytelling that, when the old man leaves abruptly under mysterious circumstances, the boy devotes himself to finding him again.
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Best Listen In A Quite While
- By John on 03-17-05
- Ireland
- By: Frank Delaney
- Narrated by: Frank Delaney
The Storyteller
Reviewed: 08-24-16
When away from this story, I felt compelled, or at least invited to return. I felt like the folks who listened in person to the stories: transfixed by each one.
Though not entirely accurate, or so said one of the docents when I visited the Neolithic monument in Ireland called New Grange, the history and fabric of each take held me spellbound, imagining each face, place, and character.
I felt sad at the book's end. Sad that there were no more stories of Ireland and its wealth of people.
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