The Moonstone [Naxos AudioBooks Edition]
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By:
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Wilkie Collins
About this listen
Upon inheriting the Moonstone, a huge and priceless diamond, Rachel Verinder's delight turns to dismay when the gem suddenly disappears. But this is no ordinary theft. Sergeant Cuff of Scotland Yard is called in and immediately suspects an intricate plot. However, not even his powers of detection can penetrate fully the mysteries surrounding the diamond. And as we listen to each character’s version of the events, layer upon layer of drama and suspense build to the final and astonishing denouement of this magnificent, classic English detective novel.
Download the accompanying reference guide.Public Domain (P)2014 Naxos AudioBooksListeners also enjoyed...
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Story was a page turner!
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Good and Evil and Funny
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Set in the financial centres of 1820s Frankfurt and London, Jezebel’s Daughter (1880) tells the story of two widows: Madame Fontaine, who will go to any lengths to secure her daughter’s marriage, and Mrs Wagner, who devotes herself to her late husband’s social reforms. In pursuit of her endeavours, Mrs Wagner befriends Jack Straw, a former inmate of Bedlam, who plays a pivotal role as the action, full of plotting and counterplotting, unfolds, culminating in the morgue, where several lives hang in the balance.
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unforgettable
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Intricate plot, good dialogue, desperately needed an editor
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horrible technically - echoes at most of the words
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unforgettable
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
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Intricate plot, good dialogue, desperately needed an editor
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horrible technically - echoes at most of the words
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Perfect voice to match a perfect narrative
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By: Wilkie Collins
What listeners say about The Moonstone [Naxos AudioBooks Edition]
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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Story
- runnerpaul
- 05-25-16
Slow start but worth it
Would you listen to The Moonstone again? Why?
Yes, as I am sure I have missed some of the character build ups.
What did you like best about this story?
How it ended.
Which scene was your favorite?
When the main character was confronted about the stealing of the jewel by his hopefully future wife.
If you were to make a film of this book, what would the tag line be?
Never trust what you see.
Any additional comments?
Loved this book by the end.
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5 people found this helpful
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Performance
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Story
- Chris
- 12-10-16
Great book, awful narration
GREAT book, but the second narrator (the old man narrating the part of the servant man) made me stop listening to this audio book, go to the Audible store, and buy the same book narrated by a different narrator. I'm sure he's a man of respect, and respectfully I say that his narration sounds like that of a drunken man. His pace and tone make it imposible to understand what he's saying 70% of the time during his narration, and his super slow pace creates a nuisance that doesn't excite the will in the reader to keep listening.
I wish I could have it refunded...
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12 people found this helpful
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Performance
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Story
- Eveline Howells
- 04-04-17
The Moonstone by Willkie Collins.
A facinating tale set in the time of the English reign in India. A story full of mystery and in language of the time of Charles Dickens.
It is a long story with so many people involved it takes you into the far east and into the countryside of England and back to Dickensian London. Wikie Collins was a fine writer. This book is well worth reading. I found it intriuging , a change of pace from todays world of detective novels, which I also enjoy to the fullest.
The readers were excellent. They really heloed draw you into the tale as it goes along.
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1 person found this helpful
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
- Gary Kelly
- 08-14-15
Be persistent
Would you listen to The Moonstone again? Why?
I read this when I was a teenager. This production is excellent. You just need to get thru the first 45 minutes, which seems a little tedious at first, but sets the scene and tone for the rest of book, which becomes increasingly engaging.
Well with the investment. Thanks to those who produced it (including Wilkie Collins :)
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14 people found this helpful
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- AnielaS
- 02-12-17
Good
Any additional comments?
Good story, but not too captivating. I am glad I listened to it but I am ready for something more dynamic.
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- roryski
- 03-03-17
Wonderful escape!!
Oh so relaxing to get lost in this other world with perfect narration. Did not want the story to end!!!
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- Ren
- 08-06-18
Excellent work of Collins~!
Although not as good as "The Woman in White" (in my opinion), "The Moonstone" is definitely one of Collin's best works and without a doubt shows the heralding of the detective novel into Victorian England. The narrators did an excellent job, especially Clack. Have to say that her part amuses me every time. I would absolutely recommend picking this one up for a listen. The fact that his book was originally serialized in the 1800's prior to being bound as one novel, makes the story very episodic. Absolutely recommend it!
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- Anne
- 09-06-18
Brilliant!
The hours speed by in this amazing narration of the brilliantly plotted and tightly written Collins' novel. It seems discursive in the glorious tradition of English 19th century novels, but, as the climax approaches, each and every detail falls into place and the listener realizes the elegance and economy of the text. The performances are absolutely top notch and the series of narrators exactly realizes the structure of the novel in text form. I'm ready to listen again!
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- John
- 11-10-16
The very finest detective story ever written
That's not my opinion. That's Dorothy Sayers' verdict, the woman who gave us Lord Peter Wimsey. But more on that later.
I suppose you could read this novel as a critique of British Imperialism: the fabled Indian gem, the “Jewel in the Crown” if you will, becomes the source of scandal, revenge, ruined reputations and general unhappiness. Obviously, everyone is better off without it.
Or you could take the social justice angle. For all his faithful service, Gabriel Betteredge admits that those above stairs have the freedom to express emotions which those below stairs dare not reveal. The fisherman’s daughter, Limping Lucy, goes proto-feminist/socialist when she conceives that a young gentleman of quality has made poor Rosanna Spearman the plaything of an idle hour.
Nah. Why ruin a good thing by going all PC/intellectual/lit-crit? Better to stick with T. S. Eliot. The Moonstone is, "the first, the longest, and the best of modern English detective novels...in a genre invented by Collins and not by Poe". Or Dorothy Sayers: "probably the very finest detective story ever written". Or me: this is one of the most delightful, engaging and engrossing books you’ll ever hear.
As indicated by Old Possum, Poe has his partisans. But whoever wrote the Wikipedia article on Moonstone has it right. Collins introduced all the elements that would become standard fare in mystery tales until, I’m guessing, the advent of the hard-boiled school:
A country house setting
The inside job
Red herrings
Bungling local cops
A celebrated, skilled investigator
A large cast of false suspects
A least likely suspect
A reconstruction of the crime
The final, bravura plot twist
Because this first and best of all detective stories was written in the 1860’s, Moonstone is a fabulous composite. First, you get a full-blooded Victorian novel, with all the attractions the best of that breed of literature has to offer: elaborately crafted writing, intersecting story lines, living characters, engaging observations, wit, pathos, charm. Then, on top of all that, we have the country house, the bungling local constable, the false suspects, the red herrings and a perplexing mystery, one that I bet you’re not going to be able to crack before the final revelation.
As usual, the Naxos recording is superb. The full cast includes some of my favorite readers. And, given the way Collin’s constructed his novels—at least the two I’m now familiar with—a full cast is essential. The story is carried along by sequential narrators each keeping strictly to what they knew at the time of which they write. Each of their narratives deserves a voice actor dedicated to that part, giving it his or her all. As these different testimonies correlate or conflict, echoing and reverberating against each other, we get multiple points of view on almost every major character. The result is three-dimensional portraits that live and breathe.
While I don’t know a lot about Wilkie Collins I do know that he took laudanum (opium) to treat gout. Predictably, the treatment became an addiction and, after the death of his mentor Dickens in 1870, helped grease the skids of a general decline in Collins’ health and the quality of his literary output. In that light, the part laudanum plays in The Moonstone—and the descriptions of the effect of the drug on a man’s senses—make for some particularly solemn listening.
Final note: a story this long and complex is a special challenge as an audiobook. You can’t flip back through the last 300-some-odd pages to refresh your memory on details. But never fear. When previous testimony is alluded to, a note indicates the chapter in which that testimony appears. Don’t know if this was Collins’ doing or if the editors of this audiobook decided to leave us these helpful guideposts, but they are invaluable. Certainly not every point is covered, but the critical ones are.
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- Edward Katterson
- 06-15-17
A 'sleuthy' mystery and hard won love story
Would you consider the audio edition of The Moonstone [Naxos AudioBooks Edition] to be better than the print version?
Superb narration sets the audio above the book version
What other book might you compare The Moonstone [Naxos AudioBooks Edition] to and why?
Most definitely, The Woman in White, Collins' best known novel.
Have you listened to any of the narrators’s other performances before? How does this one compare?
Why bother if you've found the best?
Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?
Franklin Blake's confrontation with Rachel is sweetly, beautifully, brutal.
Any additional comments?
Fenella Woolgar's interpretation of Drucilla Clak (SP) is despicably wonderful.
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