Gargantua and Pantagruel, Book IV

François Rabelais (1494 - 1553)
Translated by Peter Antony Motteux (1663 - 1718) and John Ozell ( - 1743)

This fourth in the five novels about the giants Pantagruel and his father Gargantua is the last novel indusputably attributed to François Rabelais. Seeking an answer to doubts arising in the previous novel, Pantagruel and his friends go to sea to find an oracle (the Holy Bottle). Their adventures provide many opportunities for satire, the most effective being against intolerance, credulity, and cowardice, with Pantagruel himself always affording a calm center of sanity and equilibrium. As the sea and the islands teem with monsters and madmen, so the style erupts: Nearly endless lists tumble out, nonsense words of 20-30 syllables challenge the tongue and baffle the mind, and recondite learning spills with hilarity onto the page. The author's imagination appears to explode with jokes, nonsense, flights of fancy, frivolities, and fun, held loosely together by a set of well-defined characters and a silly quest. (Summary by Thomas A. Copeland)

Genre(s): Action & Adventure Fiction, Travel Fiction, Humorous Fiction

Language: English

Section Chapter Reader Time
Play 00 Section 0: Front Matter Thomas A. Copeland
00:57:30
Play 01 Section 1 Thomas A. Copeland
00:52:09
Play 02 Section 2 Thomas A. Copeland
00:38:24
Play 03 Section 3 Thomas A. Copeland
00:41:47
Play 04 Section 4 Thomas A. Copeland
00:45:44
Play 05 Section 5 Thomas A. Copeland
00:42:20
Play 06 Section 6 Thomas A. Copeland
00:42:25
Play 07 Section 7 Thomas A. Copeland
00:49:35
Play 08 Section 8 Thomas A. Copeland
00:57:12