Author Archive

Stormy Weather

Posted on November 1, 2013 by | Posted in about LibriVox, Books, For Volunteers, Monthly Picks | Comments: 1 Comment on Stormy Weather

Heavy storms are raging all over the world at this time of the year. Better to stay indoors and experience them second hand with 10 gems from our catalogue.

Travelling through a rainstorm along a dike in Northern Frisia, a man sees another plunging himself into the floods. In a nearby tavern he is told the story of The Rider on the White Horse, written down by Theodor Storm. This recording is also available in the original German.

A Typhoon is bad enough when it hits land, but in a small ship on the ocean it is even more devastating. Read Joseph Conrad’s exciting and highly detailed account of how the Nan-Shan came through the storm.

Similar things happened to Code Schofield, but he has lost his schooner to the gale. He returns home to find people turning against him in The Harbor of Doubt. Will he be able to dispel all suspicions in the novel by Frank Williams?

Charles Fort’s Book of the Damned also deals with suspicious things: weather anomalies and non-water based things falling from the skies are only some of the strange phenomena treated in this book.

Damned to live their lives on a deserted island are Prospero and Miranda, until The Tempest caused by Prospero brings the culprit Antonio onto his shores… Find out in Shakespeares play what Prospero will do to seek revenge.

Earthquake island is where Tom and his crew end up after their airship crashes because of a hurricane. Will Tom Swift and his Wireless Message be enough to save everybody? Read the book by Victor Appleton to see what they will do.

If Tom had made proper Experiments and Observations on Different Kinds of Air, he may not have crashed in the first place. Joseph Priestley talks about different gases, measures their volumes and conductivity and their effects on living beings.

Almost with scientific precision did some Australian poets go about making money. Being paid by the word, they started The Bush Debate among them, a back and forth publishing storm written for the Weekly Bulletin of 1892.

Much less planned is the stormy relationship between Heathcliff and Catherine of Wuthering Heights. Emily Brontë’s only novel tells about the thwarted love between the couple and how it finally destroys them all.

Rainstorms, as destructive as they may seem, are an important part of nature. Steve Solomon describes what to do if there are no storms – and hence, no water – in his fascinating book Gardening without Irrigation.

Enjoy – and may you weather all storms!

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Forum posting problem now resolved

Posted on October 3, 2013 by | Posted in Blog | Comments: 4 Comments on Forum posting problem now resolved

I’m afraid that we seem to have a problem with the forum at the moment. The forum is fully viewable, but no-one is able to post. I have emailed the sysadmin, and hope that this will be sorted out quickly.

ETA The forum is now working fully again.

Ruth

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Independence

Posted on September 30, 2013 by | Posted in about LibriVox, Books, For Volunteers, Monthly Picks, News | Comments: 1 Comment on Independence

October is the month of many independence and liberation days all over the world. Let’s do a little celebration of freedom with 10 gems from our catalog.

Independence often starts with the refusal to accept things as they used to be. So does Kate, A Daughter of the Land, who, instead of staying home to help her parents as she is meant to do, is leaving home. Read the novel by Gene Stratton Porter to find out more.

Herminia’s defiance goes even further when she – though in love with Alan and pregnant with his child – refuses to marry him. Grant Allen tells the story of The Woman Who Did – elope to Italy with her lover to avoid becoming an outcast of English society.

Society is cruel to people who are different. Homosexuality is as big an issue today as it was 100 years ago, when Henry Blake Fuller wrote Bertram Cope’s Year, describing the life of a young man who is the center of both female and male attention.

Change will come though – as sure as it does in Henrik Ibsen’s dramatic masterpiece Rosmersholm, dealing with social and political changes, as played out by the free thinking heroine Rebecca who opposes Rosmer’s more traditional convictions.

Challenging traditions often means to challenge religion, and also this remains a hot issue today. On St. Bartholomew’s Eve in 1572, thousands of French protestants were murdered because of their beliefs. Read G. A. Henty’s story about two boys caught between the lines.

The conflict in Ireland also had religion at its roots. In 1916, the Easter Rising took place in order to win independence from Britain. Read The Insurrection in Dublin, a non-fiction account of the rebellion by novelist James Stephens.

Also Scotland was – and on political level still is – seeking independence from Britain. One of the best known names in history is Robert Bruce, and we hear more of his struggles in the narrative poem The Lord of the Isles by Sir Walter Scott.

In the fantasy novel The Worm Ouroboros by E. R. Eddison, the young lords of Demonland fight against the occupation of their country by King Gorice of Witchland. When the first battle is won, all seems well, but they are really just at the start of the story.

A similar setting, but in real life, took place in the 17th entury in the Low Countries, now called the Netherlands. George Edmundson tells about the struggle of independence from Spain – the king of which had just inherited Holland – in his book History of Holland.

John Stuart Mill’s thoughts On Liberty sound easy and straightforward: “Everyone should be free to do, think, or believe anything – as long as it does not harm others”. But can living in a society really be that simple?

Enjoy – and celebrate your freedom!

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All Charles Dickens’ novels in Dutch

Posted on September 23, 2013 by | Posted in News | Comments: 4 Comments on All Charles Dickens’ novels in Dutch

Today Marcel Coenders finished his self-imposed task to record all the works by Charles Dickens that are available in Dutch translation. His last project was Great Expectations. In a time span of 4 years he completed 36 titles and 800 hours of audio: a feat of epic proportions.

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