
Music in the Hills
Drumberley, Book 2
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Narrated by:
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Lesley Mackie
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By:
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D. E. Stevenson
About this listen
After spending time combatting terrorists in Malaya, James Dering returns to Scotland. He starts a new life at Mureth House, the home of his aunt and uncle, Mamie and Jock Johnstone, where he hopes to learn to be a farmer. But he soon learns that picking up farming isn't an easy task and is made even more complicated by the unexpected ups and down of rural village life. Sheep-stealing crooks, village gossip, lovestruck teenage runaways, and a brunette bombshell all disturb the peaceful solitude James had willingly signed up for. And, of course, there's Rhoda Ware, the woman he left behind....
Could she be the key to James' happiness?
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-
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When Dinah was 19, Gilbert was a sort of fairy prince. She had loved him madly but gradually she had begun to realise that he was not quite so wonderful. Despite keeping her eyes firmly shut, her heart had known there was something wrong. When Gilbert is killed in a flying accident, she is left with four children to raise. Life is hard, fighting back loneliness and eking out a meagre pension. But when her brother, Dan, newly demobbed from the Navy, arrives to whisk them away to the seaside, Dinah can at last find peace.
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Charlotte Dean enjoys nothing more than the solitude of her London flat and the monotonous days of her work at a travel bookshop. But when her younger sister unceremoniously bursts into her quiet life one afternoon, Charlotte's world turns topsy-turvy. Beloved author D. E. Stevenson captures the intricacies of post-World War I England with a light, comic touch that perfectly embodies the spirit of the time. Alternatively heartbreaking and witty, The Young Clementina is a touching tale of love, loss and redemption through friendship.
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Miss Dean's Dilemma
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Charlotte Fairlie is a successful, elegant career woman. Still in her 20s, she has landed a job as headmistress of her old school. She is admired and liked by both staff and pupils - but she begins to feel there is something missing in her well-organised life. Then one summer she goes to stay with a young pupil on the remote Scottish Isle of Targ. In the romantic atmosphere of the Highlands, anything can happen - and even the cool, efficient Charlotte surprises herself.
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On a beautiful spring day, Julia Harburn sat on a seat in Kensington Gardens enjoying the sunshine. She was wearing a white frock and a large straw hat with a sapphire-blue ribbon which exactly matched her eyes - a strange coincidence, as it turned out, for the blue sapphire was to have a far-reaching influence upon her life. So far, her life had been somewhat dull and circumscribed; but quite suddenly her horizons were enlarged. She began to make new friends.
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The Musgraves
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Sibling rivaly
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The English Air
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
Franz von Heiden, son of a Nazi official and an English mother, comes to England early in 1938 to visit his English cousins - and study them. He is both accepted and entertained by Wynne Braithwaite's family and friends. But the peace and abundance which he finds about him are not what he had expected. These people are not the decadent enemy; their casual talk and happy lives betray no weakness. Franz is disturbed - his reports to his father at home are not what had been expected there. Finding himself in love with Wynne, he is troubled at the thought of his mother's broken life in Germany.
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Yet another great Stevenson story
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By: D. E. Stevenson
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Emily Dennistoun
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- Unabridged
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
Emily Dennistoun lives alone with her elderly tyrannical father at Borriston Hall on the Scottish coast. Her mother died many years before, and her younger brother is at Oxford, presented with opportunities that Emily can only dream of. She has few friends and lives through her writing. Then she meets Francis, and despite vicissitudes of fortune, despite uncertainties, loneliness, and unhappiness, Emily holds steadfast to a love she knows is true.
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Promise of things to come
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By: D. E. Stevenson
What listeners say about Music in the Hills
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
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Performance
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- L.W.
- 12-23-17
Good story, clean,
What made the experience of listening to Music in the Hills the most enjoyable?
If you are sick listening to the F word every sentence and you don’t want to think that men think only about sex and if you cannot stand Sebastian York’s voice this might be the series for you. I listened all the way through . It has a good story, it is of another time and it is beautiful. Hardworking folks, considerate, caring. Beautiful setting. Some intrigue.
I didn’t love the narration all the time, but it was good.
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5 people found this helpful
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Overall
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- Amazon Customer
- 03-13-21
Sweet, clean, old-fashioned entertainment.
If you're looking for excitement or drama, this is not the story for you. It is a little slow getting past the introduction of characters, but once you are familiar w them, they feel like old friends. I enjoyed the vivid descriptions of the English country life. A bit predictable on plot; I hope the author provides a twist in the following book in regards to James's choice....we'll see....
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1 person found this helpful
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- Jerri C
- 06-24-17
Return to Scotland
Dorothy Emily Stevenson (D. E. Stevenson), first cousin once removed to Robert Louis Stevenson and born in Edinburgh sets many of her delightful novels in Scotland. In this novel, set and written in the early 1950's when the impact of WWII, including rationing of food and petrol (gasoline) was still impacting the island of Britain, James returns from military service in the Far East to live on a farm in the Scottish boarders area with his aunt and uncle and learn to be a farmer.
This book contains some mystery, some romance, and much more. Real characters that the reader comes to care about. A location in Scotland that is a delight.
This book is the second in a trilogy. The first, Vittoria Cottage, is already available from Audible. Hopefully the third (titled Winter and Rough Weather in England and Shoulder the Sky in the US) will be added soon. Leslie Mackie has a delightful Scots accent that adds a touch of atmosphere to the story, while still being easy for the American listener to understand.
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8 people found this helpful
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- Kay S.
- 06-07-20
One of the best D. E. Stevenson books
Narrator is very good and the story a wonderful picture of rural Scotland in the 1950s. Wholesome without being cheesy or unbelievable.
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4 people found this helpful
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- Mama C
- 07-07-17
Good, Relaxing Story
Not great literature, but a good, gentle story delivered in a pleasing way. This is the second story in the series.
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2 people found this helpful
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- LBaum
- 08-05-21
Nice story with racial semi-slurs
One instance of Assyrians referred to disparagingly. Otherwise very enjoyable, good story, meek and mild.
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- Retail Therapist
- 10-26-20
Anti Semitic and Colonial Superiority
Even though her stories are wonderful and her characters are rich and likable, I can’t ignore the fact that she makes anti-Semitic comments at least once in almost every book I’ve read. I kept trying to push it out of my mind so I could just enjoy the rest of the story. But I’m a Christian and she presents Christians as being against Jews. The entire New Testament and the whole Bible was written by Jews and Jesus was a Jew so how could she present herself as a Christian writer when she makes these comments? She also expresses a superior colonial view of the African race. This also disturbs me deeply. Very sadly I’ve decided to stop reading her books because of this.
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2 people found this helpful