Burr
A Novel (Narratives of Empire, Book 1)
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Narrated by:
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Grover Gardner
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By:
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Gore Vidal
About this listen
For listeners who can’t get enough of the hit Broadway musical Hamilton, Gore Vidal’s stunning novel about Aaron Burr, the man who killed Alexander Hamilton in a duel - and who served as a successful, if often feared, statesman of our fledgling nation.
Here is an extraordinary portrait of one of the most complicated - and misunderstood - figures among the Founding Fathers. In 1804, while serving as vice president, Aaron Burr fought a duel with his political nemesis, Alexander Hamilton, and killed him. In 1807, he was arrested, tried, and acquitted of treason. In 1833, Burr is newly married, an aging statesman considered a monster by many. But he is determined to tell his own story, and he chooses to confide in a young New York City journalist named Charles Schermerhorn Schuyler. Together, they explore both Burr's past - and the continuing civic drama of their young nation.
Burr is the first novel in Gore Vidal's Narratives of Empire series, which spans the history of the United States from the Revolution to post-World War II. With their broad canvas and sprawling cast of fictional and historical characters, these novels present a panorama of American politics and imperialism, as interpreted by one of our most incisive and ironic observers.
©1993 Gore Vidal and 2012 The Beneficiaries of Gore Vidal (P)2019 Brilliance Publishing, Inc., all rights reserved.Listeners also enjoyed...
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- By Davis on 07-10-06
By: David McCullough
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Notes from the Underground (AmazonClassics Edition)
- By: Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Constance Garnett - translator
- Narrated by: Pete Simonelli
- Length: 4 hrs and 33 mins
- Unabridged
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Isolated from society in a tenement basement in St. Petersburg, a malicious former civil servant vents his resentments. In the rambling notes that follow, we are exposed to the inner turmoil of the Underground Man, who represents the voice of his generation. An emotional, paranoid knot of contradictions, the spiteful narrator is also desperate to join a society he loathes, if only to prove his superiority to it.
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Amazing
- By Bryan on 02-19-19
By: Fyodor Dostoyevsky, and others
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King's Counsellor
- Abdication and War: The Diaries of Sir Alan Lascelles
- By: Sir Alan Lascelles, Duff Hart-Davis
- Narrated by: Pip Torrens
- Length: 14 hrs and 21 mins
- Unabridged
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As Assistant Private Secretary to four monarchs, 'Tommy' Lascelles had a ringside seat from which to observe the workings of the royal household and Downing Street during the first half of the 20th century. These fascinating diaries begin with Edward VIII's abdication and end with George VI's death and his daughter Elizabeth's Coronation. In between we see George VI at work and play, a portrait more intimate than any other previously published.
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One of the most enjoyable audiobooks I've heard.
- By Elizabeth on 04-14-21
By: Sir Alan Lascelles, and others
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Dombey and Son
- By: Charles Dickens
- Narrated by: Frederick Davidson
- Length: 36 hrs and 59 mins
- Unabridged
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In this carefully crafted novel, Dickens reveals the complexity of London society in the enterprising 1840s as he takes the listener into the business firm and home of one of its most representative patriarchs, Paul Dombey.
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Perfect pair
- By Philip on 03-25-08
By: Charles Dickens
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Can You Forgive Her?
- By: Anthony Trollope
- Narrated by: Timothy West
- Length: 28 hrs and 8 mins
- Unabridged
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Can You Forgive Her? is the first of the six in the Palliser series. Trollope inextricably binds together the issues of parliamentary election and marriage, of politics and privacy. The values and aspirations of the governing stratum of Victorian society are ruthlessly examined, and none remains unscathed. But above all Trollope focuses on the predicament of women. 'What should a woman do with her life?' asks Alice Vavasor of herself, and this theme is echoed by every other woman in the audiobook.
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Superb performance and sound
- By David on 05-21-10
By: Anthony Trollope
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The Titan
- By: Theodore Dreiser
- Narrated by: Stuart Langton
- Length: 19 hrs and 33 mins
- Unabridged
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The Titan is the second volume in what the author called his "trilogy of desire," featuring the character of Frank Cowperwood, a powerful, irresistibly compelling man driven by his own need for power, beautiful women, and social prestige.
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Not for the faint of heart, but addicting!
- By P. Evans on 09-16-18
By: Theodore Dreiser
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Washington's End
- The Final Years and Forgotten Struggle
- By: Jonathan Horn
- Narrated by: Arthur Morey
- Length: 8 hrs and 14 mins
- Unabridged
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Washington’s End begins where most biographies of George Washington leave off, with the first president exiting office after eight years and entering what would become the most bewildering stage of his life. Embittered by partisan criticism and eager to return to his farm, Washington assumed a role for which there was no precedent at a time when the kings across the ocean yielded their crowns only upon losing their heads. In a different sense, Washington would lose his head, too.
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INTRIGUING SNAPSHOT
- By JPALJ on 02-23-20
By: Jonathan Horn
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The Gilded Age
- By: Mark Twain
- Narrated by: Robin Field
- Length: 19 hrs and 7 mins
- Unabridged
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First published in 1873, The Gilded Age is both a biting satire and a revealing portrait of post-Civil War America - an age of corruption when crooked land speculators, ruthless bankers, and dishonest politicians voraciously took advantage of the nation's peacetime optimism. With his characteristic wit and perception, Mark Twain and his collaborator, Charles Dudley Warner, attack the greed, lust, and naiveté of their own time in a work that endures as a valuable social document and one of America's most important satirical novels.
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Great Story, but Audio Quality Not Always Good
- By BethGA on 02-27-24
By: Mark Twain
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The Agitators
- Three Friends Who Fought for Abolition and Women's Rights
- By: Dorothy Wickenden
- Narrated by: Heather Alicia Simms, Anne Twomey, Gabra Zackman, and others
- Length: 13 hrs and 8 mins
- Unabridged
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In the 1850s, Harriet Tubman, strategically brilliant and uncannily prescient, rescued some seventy enslaved people from Maryland’s Eastern Shore and shepherded them north along the underground railroad. One of her regular stops was Auburn, New York, where she entrusted passengers to Martha Coffin Wright, a Quaker mother of seven, and Frances A. Seward, the wife of William H. Seward. Through exhaustive research, Wickenden traces the second American revolution these women fought to bring about, the toll it took on their families, and its lasting effects on the country.
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Excellent!
- By Nikki on 12-22-21
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Louisa
- The Extraordinary Life of Mrs. Adams
- By: Louisa Thomas
- Narrated by: Kirsten Potter
- Length: 15 hrs and 42 mins
- Unabridged
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Born in London to an American father and a British mother on the eve of the Revolutionary War, Louisa Catherine Johnson was raised in circumstances very different from the New England upbringing of future president John Quincy Adams, whose life had been dedicated to public service from the earliest age. And yet John Quincy fell in love with her almost despite himself. Their often tempestuous but deeply close marriage lasted half a century.
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Insightful
- By Jean on 05-18-16
By: Louisa Thomas
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Ben Franklin: Inventing America
- Sterling Point Books
- By: Thomas Fleming
- Narrated by: A. C. Fellner
- Length: 4 hrs and 45 mins
- Unabridged
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Perhaps more than even Washington, Jefferson, or Adams, Ben Franklin is the Founding Father who best exemplifies the authentic American spirit and values. Eminent historian Thomas Fleming paints a lively portrait of this self-made man blessed with a wealth of talents: a best-selling author, the most important newspaper publisher in America, and a world-renowned scientist and inventor before he took on the task of becoming the true "Father" of American independence.
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Amazing and Inspiring
- By Kindle Customer on 11-26-11
By: Thomas Fleming
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Do not listen to the introduction!!!!!
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Inventing a Nation
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Volumes have been written about George Washington, John Adams, and Thomas Jefferson, but no previous work captures the intimate and vital details the way Inventing a Nation does. Vidal's consummate skill takes you into the minds and private rooms of these great men, illuminating their opinions of one another and their concerns about crafting a workable democracy.
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Reader Beware: Mixed with a political agenda
- By Robert on 09-09-04
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In this extraordinary memoir, Vidal recalls his accomplishments and defeats, discusses the friends and enemies he has made, and contemplates the nature of mortality. In the Navy, Vidal was forced to use point to point navigation whenever compasses failed. It is an apt analogy for his life, which has been filled with triumphs as well as controversies. Vidal has had relationships with innumerable luminaries, including President Kennedy, Tennessee Williams, Eleanor Roosevelt, Orson Welles, and Greta Garbo.
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Digressive, like an old man's reveries
- By margot on 08-01-13
By: Gore Vidal
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Palimpsest
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This explosively entertaining memoir abounds in gossip, satire, historical apercus, and trenchant observations. Vidal’s compelling narrative weaves back and forth in time, providing a whole view of the author’s celebrated life, from his birth in 1925 to today, and features a cast of memorable characters - including the Kennedy family, Marlon Brando, Anais Nin, and Eleanor Roosevelt.
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Intelligent, Amusing
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Brilliant narration!
- By Abhishek Deepak on 10-23-19
By: Gore Vidal
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- Narrated by: Malcolm Hillgartner
- Length: 27 hrs and 8 mins
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Cyrus Spitama, grandson of the prophet Zoroaster and lifelong friend of Xerxes, spent most of his life as Persian ambassador for the great king Darius. He traveled to India, where he discussed nirvana with Buddha, and to the warring states of Cathay, where he learned of Tao from Master Li and fished on the riverbank with Confucius. Now blind and aged in Athens - the Athens of Pericles, Sophocles, Thucydides, Herodotus, and Socrates - Cyrus recounts his days as he strives to resolve the fundamental questions that have guided his life’s journeys.
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A Magnificent Tour de Force
- By Harry Haller on 01-31-20
By: Gore Vidal
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The City and the Pillar
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- Length: 6 hrs and 24 mins
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Do not listen to the introduction!!!!!
- By Billmatto on 12-05-19
By: Gore Vidal
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Volumes have been written about George Washington, John Adams, and Thomas Jefferson, but no previous work captures the intimate and vital details the way Inventing a Nation does. Vidal's consummate skill takes you into the minds and private rooms of these great men, illuminating their opinions of one another and their concerns about crafting a workable democracy.
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Reader Beware: Mixed with a political agenda
- By Robert on 09-09-04
By: Gore Vidal
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Point to Point Navigation
- A Memoir
- By: Gore Vidal
- Narrated by: Gore Vidal
- Length: 8 hrs and 18 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
-
Story
In this extraordinary memoir, Vidal recalls his accomplishments and defeats, discusses the friends and enemies he has made, and contemplates the nature of mortality. In the Navy, Vidal was forced to use point to point navigation whenever compasses failed. It is an apt analogy for his life, which has been filled with triumphs as well as controversies. Vidal has had relationships with innumerable luminaries, including President Kennedy, Tennessee Williams, Eleanor Roosevelt, Orson Welles, and Greta Garbo.
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Digressive, like an old man's reveries
- By margot on 08-01-13
By: Gore Vidal
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Palimpsest
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- Unabridged
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This explosively entertaining memoir abounds in gossip, satire, historical apercus, and trenchant observations. Vidal’s compelling narrative weaves back and forth in time, providing a whole view of the author’s celebrated life, from his birth in 1925 to today, and features a cast of memorable characters - including the Kennedy family, Marlon Brando, Anais Nin, and Eleanor Roosevelt.
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Gore Vidal’s reputation as America’s finest essayist is an enduring one. This collection, chosen by the author from 40 years of work, contains about two-thirds of what he published in various magazines and journals. He has divided the essays into three categories, or states. State of the art covers literature, including novelists and critics, bestsellers, pieces on Henry James, Oscar Wilde, Suetonius, Nabakov, and Montaigne (a previosly uncollected essay from 1992).
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An entertaining anthology & a superb narration
- By S&DH on 11-13-21
By: Gore Vidal
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Fallen Founder
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Generations have been told that Aaron Burr was a betrayer: of Alexander Hamilton, of his country, of those who had nobler ideas. But that version has been shaped by historians and writers from the 18th century on who were blinded by tabloid reports and propaganda created by Burr's political enemies during his lifetime. It is time to discover the real Aaron Burr.
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Very Burr-Centric
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The Selected Essays of Gore Vidal
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Gore Vidal - novelist, playwright, critic, screenwriter, memoirist, indefatigable political commentator, and controversialist - is America’s premier man of letters. No other writer brings more sparkling wit, vast learning, indelible personality, and provocative mirth to the job of writing an essay.
By: Gore Vidal, and others
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A Search for the King
- By: Gore Vidal
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- Length: 6 hrs and 33 mins
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Kidnapped and held to ransom by Duke Leopold of Austria after the Third Crusade, Richard the Lion Heart, it is said, was found by his faithful troubadour Blondel de Neel. But how? And what trials did the faithful and long-suffering lyricist have to overcome to find his king? Gore Vidal paints a broad, colorful, and poignant picture of a man searching for his master; for the symbolic king who is the goal of man’s eternal quest; for the spiritual centre of his life.
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A great romp by a young Gore Vidal
- By Gail N. on 10-07-20
By: Gore Vidal
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Perpetual War for Perpetual Peace: How We Got to Be So Hated
- American Imperialism, Book 1
- By: Gore Vidal
- Narrated by: Jeff Cummings
- Length: 3 hrs and 59 mins
- Unabridged
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In a series of penetrating and alarming essays, whose centerpiece is a commentary on the events of September 11, 2001 (deemed then too controversial to publish), Gore Vidal challenges the comforting consensus following September 11th and goes back and draws connections to Timothy McVeigh’s bombing of the federal building in Oklahoma City. He asks were these simply the acts of “evil-doers?”
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Gore Vidal Shits on Everything
- By Jeremy Hager on 01-17-20
By: Gore Vidal
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Myra Breckinridge
- A Novel (Myra and Myron, Book 1)
- By: Gore Vidal, Camille Paglia - introduction
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- Length: 6 hrs and 59 mins
- Unabridged
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"I am Myra Breckinridge, whom no man will ever possess." So begins the irresistible testimony of the luscious instructor of Empathy and Posture at Buck Loner's Academy of Drama and Modeling. Myra has a secret that only her surgeon shares; a passion for classic Hollywood films, which she regards as the supreme achievements of Western culture; and a sacred mission to bring heteronormative civilization to its knees. Fifty years after its first publication unleashed gales of laughter, delight, and ferocious dissent, Myra's moment to instruct and delight has once again arrived.
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Well performed
- By Kenny D on 06-08-19
By: Gore Vidal, and others
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American Emperor
- Aaron Burr's Challenge to Jefferson's America
- By: David O. Stewart
- Narrated by: Andrew Garman
- Length: 11 hrs and 26 mins
- Unabridged
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A spellbinding storyteller, historian David O. Stewart traces the canny and charismatic Aaron Burr from the threshold of the presidency in 1800 to his duel with Alexander Hamilton. Stewart recounts Burr’s efforts to carve out an empire, taking listeners across the American West as the renegade vice president schemes with foreign ambassadors, the U.S. general-in-chief, and future presidents.
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Aaron Burr history
- By Gerald on 01-06-13
By: David O. Stewart
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Messiah
- By: Gore Vidal
- Narrated by: Harry Shaw
- Length: 8 hrs and 59 mins
- Unabridged
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In the aftermath of World War II, a funeral home mortician by the name of John Cave has a revelation about the nature of death: Death is peace; death is nothing to be feared. This simple concept will evolve into an atheistic religion known as Cavism, which will displace Christianity as the dominant western faith. But Cavism has a dark past, and even more ominous future.
By: Gore Vidal
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Messiah
- A Novel
- By: Gore Vidal
- Narrated by: Patrick Lawlor
- Length: 9 hrs and 26 mins
- Unabridged
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Messiah traces the collapse of Christianity and the rise of the next great religion of Western civilization: Cavism. Founded by undertaker John Cave, Cavism holds that it is a holy thing to die. Packaged by a marketing genius, the new religion conquers the world more quickly than any prior memeplex, but pockets of resistance remain. Eugene Luther, formerly an apostle of Cavism, now a hunted apostate, writes his memoirs as a last gesture of freedom while the noose of a totalitarian religious state tightens around him.
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A Really Well Read Story And Very Professional Audiobook
- By Frank Donnelly on 05-02-21
By: Gore Vidal
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The Secret Wife of Aaron Burr
- By: Susan Holloway Scott
- Narrated by: Kirsten Potter
- Length: 17 hrs and 54 mins
- Unabridged
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Eugenie Bearhani (1760-1835) was born in Calcutta, raised in Haiti, and brought as a servant - a free woman of color - to America by an English officer on the eve of the American Revolution. Yet none of that prepared Eugenie for her next employer: Colonel Aaron Burr, who some whispered had made a pact with the devil. The lines between master and servant soon tangle and blur, and first attraction becomes dangerous obsession. Many historians deny she even existed, but she and the children she bore to Burr were very real - so was her little-known marriage to America's first true villain.
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Read it instead.
- By Jennifer Baker on 09-15-20
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The First Man in Rome
- By: Colleen McCullough
- Narrated by: David Ogden Stiers
- Length: 6 hrs
- Abridged
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In the first century B.C. at the height of the Roman Republic, two men set their sights on becoming the First Man - the Roman more respected than any other. Marius, a heroic man of strength and means, lacks the noble blood to contend for the First Man, but overcomes his common status when he marries into the patrician house of Caesar. Sulla, a pleasure-seeking aristocrat without money of his own, is transformed by his ambitions into a fierce and daring warrior. Together the two men will shape history as they are thrust into a raging storm....
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MASSACRE! DON'T BUY ABRIGED BOOKS!
- By R. L. Roeck on 01-28-14
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When Christ and His Saints Slept
- Plantagenets, Book 1
- By: Sharon Kay Penman
- Narrated by: Anne Flosnik
- Length: 36 hrs and 36 mins
- Unabridged
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In When Christ and His Saints Slept, the first of a trilogy that will tell the story of Henry II and Eleanor of Aquitaine, master storyteller and historian Sharon Kay Penman illuminates one of the less known but fascinating periods of English history. It begins with the death of King Henry I, son of William the Conqueror and father of Maude, his only living legitimate offspring.
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Please release Pt 2!
- By BVerité on 06-08-19
What listeners say about Burr
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- William
- 06-27-23
Aaron Burr Created in Gore Vidal's Image
Note, this is a novel. It’s a historical novel and almost all of the people in it (other than the main narrator) as well as the events are historical, but it is still a novel and it must be read as such. It’s written about the adult life of Aaron Burr, the man who very nearly became the third president of the US when he was defeated by Thomas Jefferson and thus became Jefferson’s vice-president. But he is really famous for a duel while he was vice-president where he killed Alexander Hamilton and in doing so, his own political career. Later he was accused by Jefferson of treason for plotting to break off some of the western territories and set up another republic, possibly including Mexico, charges which do seem to have been at least partially trumped up by Jefferson. He he was acquitted of those charges by the Supreme Court’s Justice Marshall.
So, that’s the man, but Gore Vidal is actually going much further than just a biographical novel. You might say that his real topic is an account of the early days of the republic and he applies to it the cynical and pessimistic tone of the age when it was written, the age of Nixon and the protests against the Vietnam War. And that is how the time is portrayed, as an experiment gone badly wrong from the beginning, hijacked by incompetent leaders whose belief in the democratic experiment depended on whether things were going in the direction that they believed to be correct and in ways that were beneficial to them.
I bought this partly because it was rated highly, partly because of my great respect for Alexander Hamilton and thus a curiosity about the man who killed him, and partly because, other than the duel with Hamilton, Burr was an important figure in the founding of our country about whom I (we?) know very little. And there was much in this that I did find to be fresh and interesting. As the saying goes, history is written by the victors, and therefore it is to be expected that the villains that we know may not have been as totally depraved as they have been pictured and our heroes did have some flaws that were papered over.
And the quality of the writing, the plot, the structure is certainly excellent. The “story” is told in a creative way by a young New York City journalist named Charles Schuyler, who takes pains to inform us that he is not of “that” Schuyler family, in other words, the wealthy and influential Schuylers, one of whose daughters was the wife of Alexander Hamilton. Since this is the one significant character in the novel who is not historical, it seems that Vidal must have chosen this name with some reason in mind.
And indeed, Charles Schuyler is a fledgling journalist who has been given an assignment. It is 1833 and Schuyler’s editor is strongly opposed to presidential hopeful Martin Van Buren. Burr and Van Buren were good friends (and this was true) and there was even a rumor that Van Buren was Burr’s illegitimate son (also true that this was a rumor but the rumor was incorrect). It was hoped that Schuyler could gain Burr’s trust and his agreement to cooperate in working on a biography, maybe the Burr would admit that the rumor was true which would scuttle Van Buren’s political career. This kind of literary device is quite effective for this type of novel because it makes it easier to bounce back and forth in time while keeping the dialog in the present since the past would be told by Burr in the present.
Burr is now an aging man who must know that he is coming close to the end of his life and he is likely to want to tell his story to someone he feels he can trust to portray him as Burr wants to be portrayed.
Of course, the Aaron Burr who is telling us his story is, at least partly, the creation of Gore Vidal. And, unlike most of the other founding fathers, Burr’s papers were mostly lost in a shipwreck (that also took the life of his daughter), so, to be fair, Vidal does have less to work with. The result is at least believable even if fictional. It’s impossible to know if this is the “real” Aaron Burr but it certainly sounds like a plausible version of him.
And therein lies one of the difficulties of this book. This Aaron Burr is always right and was able to defend every action. Of course, that’s not too surprising. Everyone else is a villain of some sort, which may not also be too surprising from someone who had been villainized by the public and whose ambitions had been destroyed. Burr was the only one who really cared about democracy, about freedom, about the rule of law and judicial independence. Why was everyone so upset about a duel. Was he the first one to engage in that practice? And those people had turned Hamilton into almost a god, second only to Washtington, Hamilton, who was a scheming, conniving, incompetent man who just followed the coattails of whoever was in power. Washington was a stoic who had no friends, who was greedy and egotistic and really wanted to be king. And he was an incompetent general who lost Canada because he wouldn’t listen to Burr’s advice. Monroe also hated Washington. And Monroe would likely have killed Hamilton long ago if Burr hadn’t talked them out of a duel, though it was obvious they were cowards who didn't really want to fight anyway. John Adams is quarrelsome, arrogant, pompous, thin-skinned, and paranoid. But Jefferson was the worst. Jefferson was sleazy and two-faced. He was in France when the Constitution was framed and never supported it. He decried the power that it gave to the presidency until he became president and then certainly never believed that it should limit his power. He was a coward who, when governor of Virginia, abandoned his post and fled as the British approached. You could never trust him, except to do whatever was beneficial to Jefferson. And Jefferson had betrayed his own vice president, trying to convict him of treason for a plan that Jefferson himself had supported.
Some of that is true. Much of the criticisms of Jefferson are supported in Jefferson’s own writings about himself. Adams was arrogant and pompous. It’s not clear what Monroe thought of Washington and it may be that he did not hold him in the highest regard, but there is no evidence that he hated him. As for Washington, he did have trouble expressing his feelings and certainly had some great military failings in his early years but he was able to learn from his mistakes to achieve some significant strategic victories in his later years as a general and he very clearly didn’t want to be king.
The problem is that this “Burr” seems a whole lot like Gore Vidal. It seems that Vidal took the evidence that was there to support an Aaron Burr that was truly better than the reputation that has been passed down in history and from that created a more perfect Burr in his own image.
I recommend it as fiction. I recommend it as giving us a more human view of our founders and even a better understanding of just how easily things could have gone wrong in those early days. But for an accurate portrayal of history, it is greatly lacking and in fact seems closer to a distortion written with an axe to grind.
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3 people found this helpful
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- P.
- 08-13-21
Fascinating
Well! What a counterpoint to Chernow’s HAMILTON! I’ve now read several straight biographies and historical fiction about the “founding fathers” and find we really need to move to national leadership by women. These were a bunch of egotistical, greedy, power-driven white guy’s who’s legacy is Insurrection, insecurity, rivalry, and vindictiveness. I was no fan of Gore Vidal personally but he does write well. A recommended read.
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- Jim
- 03-05-23
Compelling listen
The story, and the reading are erudite and compelling. I thoroughly enjoyed this. I’m ready to start another Vidal classic!
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- Palabras
- 03-07-23
Engaging history of the founding
Of this nation. Contentious as we still are. Excellent narration of Vidal’s representation of Burr and Hamilton and Jefferson
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- Judy
- 06-24-19
Delicious
Yep, I'm a self-avowed Vidal groupie: have read "Burr" about five times over the past 20 years and was thrilled to see Audible finally added it to its catalog. You either get Vidal or you don't: he was acerbic, exacting, scholarly, bitchy and enormously entertaining. Our politics don't always line up, but his insights into the paths by which the U.S. arrived at its current point-in-time on the world stage are spot-on. Listen carefully: rewind and review, if need be. However, you'll not consider America's Founding Fathers (and a few of its Mothers) as you had previously after listening/reading "Burr." You GO, Gore!
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73 people found this helpful
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- Thomas Considine III
- 08-14-19
Great book
Wow can’t believe I hadn’t read or listened to this book before now. Highly recommend
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15 people found this helpful
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- rudolph g behrmann
- 12-01-20
The much maligned Vice President
Loved it. It sounded just as I envisioned it would sound. Very, very satisfying. I'd recommend it, even if you've already read it.
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- Monica
- 07-31-21
A fantastic novel!
I was hooked from the beginning. Gore has a way of describing characters and events, like no other.
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- Delzona
- 02-24-24
Joyful to hear
This was my first time listening (reading?) to anything about Burr. I found this story interesting and intriguing. It certainly has spurred me to read more about Burr. This is also the first book by Gore Vidal that I’ve read and I really enjoyed his prose! So much so that I’m glad I took the chance to purchase this book and I will definitely continue reading the other books in this series.
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- Amazon Customer
- 05-25-20
history in flesh and blood
the language, the wit, the endless irony, Vidal and Grover Gardner bring to life the American beginning. The most ironic is the way the framers of our amazing constitution bent and twisted the thing but could not break it. and politicians do now, and we can see our present in this past. it's Delicious!
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