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Harrington

Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers

(4,923 Sterne; 13 Bewertungen)

Harrington follows the protagonist of the same name who tries to explore his memories in order to understand his views on Jews. It begins with Harrington's early images of Jews, which are formed by a collection stories told by his maid, of Simon the Jew. His parents further strengthen this image by rewarding Harrington's antisemitism. Only after going to public school and coming face to face with the bully Mowbray are Harrington's views on Jews changed. Mowbray's tormenting of a Jewish peddler Jacob causes this sudden shift in thinking. Then with the introduction of Berenice Montenero, an American Jew who moved to England with her wealthy father, all does not run smoothly. (Summary by Michele Eaton) (7 hr 39 min)

Chapters

Chapter 01

19:13

Read by Jenny Bradshaw

Chapter 02

18:50

Read by Jenny Bradshaw

Chapter 03

20:21

Read by Jenny Bradshaw

Chapter 04

15:43

Read by Jenny Bradshaw

Chapter 05

22:13

Read by Jenny Bradshaw

Chapter 06

25:00

Read by Jenny Bradshaw

Chapter 07

16:37

Read by Jenny Bradshaw

Chapter 08

19:48

Read by Jenny Bradshaw

Chapter 09

26:11

Read by Jenny Bradshaw

Chapter 10

17:49

Read by Jenny Bradshaw

Chapter 11

29:52

Read by Lee Smalley

Chapter 12

26:58

Read by Lee Smalley

Chapter 13

38:38

Read by Lee Smalley

Chapter 14

26:41

Read by Lee Smalley

Chapter 15

40:08

Read by Lee Smalley

Chapter 16

27:31

Read by Lee Smalley

Chapter 17

29:37

Read by Lee Smalley

Chapter 18

20:30

Read by Lee Smalley

Chapter 19

17:25

Read by Lee Smalley

Bewertungen

Harrington

(5 Sterne)

The word on the street is that the author wrote this to make up for a stereotyped Jewish character she had put into an earlier book. True or not, I'm pretty sure this is one of the earliest (1813) of the pro-Jewish genre that eventually included Daniel Deronda (Elliot), Aaron Cohen (Farjeon), etc. Like the latter, the novel contrasts a couple of Jewish paragons with many non-Jewish cads and bigots. But for all that it's an engaging story with a heavy dose of romance and well worth listening to. The two narrators do a good job with the material. It's to their credit that neither get lost in any of those long 19th century sentences. Thank you for making this available to the listening public. TheBookworm (Manchester, UK)

Love the story and the readers

(5 Sterne)

Maria Edgeworth was a talented writer. Not a dull moment in this book and both readers did a fantastic job. Thank you.