
Middlemarch
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Narrated by:
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Kate Reading
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By:
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George Eliot
About this listen
The novel is set in the small town of Middlemarch and follows the inter-related lives of several characters. At the heart of the book is Dorothea, a kind-hearted and honest woman, who longs to find some way to improve the world. She marries an older academic, Casaubon, against the advice of her friends and family. Casaubon tries to assert his influence over Dorothea, but she refuses to succumb to Casaubon's will. Casaubon soon dies of a heart attack, and Dorothea marries his cousin, Will. But, in a last attempt to control Dorothea's life, Casaubon's will states that if Dorothea marries Will, she will lose her claim to Casaubon's estate.
Other unforgettable characters in Middlemarch include the young doctor, Lydgate, who come to the town to start his own practice. He soon falls in love with Rosamund, a woman who has spent her life in Middlemarch, and they eventually marry. Fred Vincey, used to a lavish lifestyle but also a gambler, falls into debt as he waits to inherit money from a rich neighbor. He drifts toward the clergy, and longs to marry Mary Garth. But until he proves himself worthy, Mary will have nothing to do with him.
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Newland Archer is a young lawyer, a member of New York’s high society, and engaged to be married to May Welland. Countess Ellen Olenska is May’s cousin, and wants a divorce from the Polish nobleman she married. Intelligent and beautiful, she comes back to New York where she tries to fit into the high society life she had before her marriage. Her family and former friends, however, are shocked by the idea of divorce within their social circle, and she finds herself snubbed by her own class. Ellen and Newland fall in love and must choose between passion and conventions.
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A Great comic/tragedy
- By David P on 12-09-15
By: Edith Wharton
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The Golden Bowl
- By: Henry James
- Narrated by: Simon Prebble, Katherine Kellgren
- Length: 21 hrs and 39 mins
- Unabridged
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Published in 1904, The Golden Bowl is the last completed novel of Henry James. In it, the widowed American Adam Verver is in Europe with his daughter Maggie. They are rich, finely appreciative of European art and culture, and deeply attached to each other. Maggie has all the innocent charm of so many of Jamess young American heroines. She is engaged to Amerigo, an impoverished Italian prince; he must marry money, and as his name suggests, an American heiress is the perfect solution.
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Collapses under the weight of its own brilliance
- By Erez on 03-18-14
By: Henry James
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Middlemarch
- By: George Eliot
- Narrated by: Alison Larkin
- Length: 36 hrs and 49 mins
- Unabridged
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Considered one of the great English novels, George Eliot's Middlemarch, A Study of Provincial Life follows myriad characters and their lives in the eponymous town, Middlemarch, in the 1800s. Utilizing a realistic style, Eliot considers issues such as religion, education, and the status of women—to name just a few.
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Perfect narration of a great novel.
- By Mary Katherine Worth on 09-09-24
By: George Eliot
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Dead Souls
- By: Nikolai Gogol, C. J. Hogarth - translator
- Narrated by: Arthur Morey
- Length: 15 hrs and 50 mins
- Unabridged
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Chichikov, a mysterious stranger, arrives in a provincial town and visits a succession of landowners to make each a strange offer. He proposes to buy the names of dead serfs still registered on the census, saving their owners from paying tax on them, and to use these "souls" as collateral to reinvent himself as a gentleman. In this ebullient masterpiece, Nikolai Gogol created a grotesque gallery of human types.
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Captures absurdity of mid 19th century Russia
- By Darwin8u on 10-26-12
By: Nikolai Gogol, and others
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The Warden: Timothy West Version
- By: Anthony Trollope
- Narrated by: Timothy West
- Length: 6 hrs and 44 mins
- Unabridged
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The first novel of six in Trollope's series of the Chronicles of Barsetshire introducing the fictional cathedral town of Barchester and the characters of Septimus Harding, the Warden, and his son-in-law Archdeacon Grantly. The Warden concerns the moral dilemma of the conscientious Reverend Septimus Harding, who finds himself at the centre of a bitter conflict between defenders of Church privilege and the reformers of the mid-Victorian period.
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The Old Man & His Terrific and Single Daughter
- By Joseph R on 08-30-09
By: Anthony Trollope
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Swann's Way
- By: Marcel Proust, Scott Moncrieff - translator
- Narrated by: George Guidall
- Length: 21 hrs and 27 mins
- Unabridged
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Swann’s Way is the first and best-known part of Proust’s monumental work, Remembrance of Things Past. Often compared to a symphony, this complex masterpiece is ideally suited for audio. Listening lets you appreciate anew the incredible beauty of Proust’s language and the uniqueness of his style. The novel’s narrator, Marcel, finds the true meaning of experience in memories stimulated by some random object or event.
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Beautiful, BUT
- By Michael on 02-04-13
By: Marcel Proust, and others
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Middlemarch (AmazonClassics Edition)
- By: George Eliot
- Narrated by: Jayne Entwistle
- Length: 36 hrs and 3 mins
- Unabridged
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Young, ardent Dorothea Brooke defies her sister by wedding the much older Reverend Edward Casaubon, blindly hoping to assist in his scholarly pursuits. Tertius Lydgate, a progressive doctor, new and unwelcome in provincial Middlemarch, is charmed into marriage with the selfish and shallow Rosamond Vincy, a disastrous mismatch of his own. Soon blatant stubbornness, unruly jealousy, blind idealism, and calculated blackmail threaten to upend the Midlands village and lay waste to happy endings.
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EXCELLENT SUPERB NARRATOR
- By HOWARD SLATKIN on 03-13-22
By: George Eliot
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Mary Barton
- A Tale of Manchester Life
- By: Elizabeth Gaskell
- Narrated by: Juliet Stevenson
- Length: 16 hrs and 17 mins
- Unabridged
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When her father assassinates Henry Carson, his employer's son and Mary's admirer, suspicion falls on Mary's second admirer, Jem, a fellow worker. Mary has to prove her lover's innocence without incriminating her own father.
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Mrs. Gaskell was so far ahead of her time
- By Pat on 08-20-13
the best
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19th century soap opera
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Superb
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This novel deals wide range of issues including selflessness, selfishness, greed, malevolence, benevolence, love, unsavory pasts, murder(or not?), and more.
Worth the time it takes to read!
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Now This Is A Novel
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Middlemarch, Kate Reading
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wonderful
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Also, Middlemarch delivers perhaps the most elegant final paragraph a novel could hope for. Wow.
Worth every minute
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Not counting Silas Marner, (which I read in middle school), this was my first George Eliot novel. It is a fascinating glimpse into rural village life in Victorian England, and as performed by Kate Reading, it is a treasure. All the characters are so well written that I had no difficulty seeing them in my minds eye. It's become a once a year re-read.
BTW, the last time this book got the mini series treatment was 1994. Hey BBC, it's time for an update!
Lovely rendering of a classic
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The story has many sub-stories, which all bind together to create a village of personalities. Then the great George Eliot goes to work intermixing these personalities. This novel examines personalities and the interrelationship between personalities. After the opening story of our heroine Dorothea, it quickly adds a dozen different personalities and their intermixing in the Middlemarch society. This is very much a daytime soap opera. But one with brilliant display of the English language by a master; Ms. Eliot. This book is a perfect example of Romantic era’s ability to consider life with flowering words and a psychological understanding par excellence. It enraptures.
As to the overall plot, each of these dozen or so personal stories all get intermixed into a discombobulation. . . . And being a Romantic novel -- all gest sorted out somewhat satisfactorily in the end with a little tragedy here and a little happiness there. A most wonderful read!
In its primordial story we are confronted with the coming into being of a mid-nineteenth century marriage, between a good looking young woman and an older Ichabod Crane type man. It is the story of a bride to be, our Dorothea, and her family’s individual desires for her, which are distinct from her own. Dorothea, is going into a marriage that seems to be a monumental error for herself. Will this irregular relationship be in error? Dorothea is a woman with a thirst for knowledge, without the capacity to obtain that knowledge and a wrongful belief that as a woman she needs an educated man to guide her. Educated she gets, but much less than a man; and certainly not a lover.
Middlemarch concerns the status of woman and the institution of marriage; at least as such was discerned by our late nineteenth century author, Ms. George Eliot. Yet, all her considerations continue to hold true for us today.
The status of women and their position in marriage in the Victorian age is but one of the societal norms examined by Ms. Eliot. As in all Romantic Era novels the Depicted Lives must cover many topics. Ms. Eliot does that giving us much to consider about religion, hypocrisy, political reform, and education, as well as the virtues and vices of marriage. All these elements are sorted through in the dialogues between the characters.
This text is rich with much to consider. For example, and in addition to the above topics, Ms. Eliot discusses the various manners of becoming a medical doctor in the 1830s, how those systems have produced quackeries and how the charlatanisms make their way by prescribing and selling far too many preparations (i.e., prescriptions). We also have a full study into jealously, and how it creates the evil that was feared by the jealous, but that would not have come into being but for the jealousy.
The book is a comment on societal shortcomings. Many continuing into our present societies.
Be aware though. Ms. Eliot takes us on a biography of many of her characters, and we learn of their deep passions for success in their life long endeavors. Yet, for most of her characters there will be no success and in fact delusion. She does though very precisely explain what societal ill or personal fragility caused these failings in life. Thus, Middlemarch is a great book to do self-analysis thought.
Kate Reading did a magnificent job for 93% of the work. A Great listen, but on the subject of people speaking in anger and her chosen voice for two of the male actors was a disappointment.
Elliot at Her Best On the Institution of Marriage
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