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The Scarlet Letter

Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers

(3,439 Sterne; 311 Bewertungen)

The story begins in seventeenth-century Salem, Massachusetts, then a Puritan settlement. A young woman, Hester Prynne, is led from the town prison with her infant daughter, Pearl, in her arms and the scarlet letter “A” on her breast. The scarlet letter "A" represents the act of adultery that she has committed; it is to be a symbol of her sin for all to see. She will not reveal her lover’s identity, however, and the scarlet letter, along with her public shaming, is her punishment for her sin and her secrecy. (Summary adapted from Wikipedia) (9 hr 10 min)

Chapters

Introductory: The Custom-House, Part 1

51:22

Read by hefyd

Introductory: The Custom-House, Part 2

46:47

Read by hefyd

The Prison-Door

3:13

Read by librarianite

The Market-Place

20:30

Read by librarianite

The Recognition

21:26

Read by Ana Simão

The Interview

16:55

Read by Ana Simão

Hester at her Needle

21:16

Read by Rebecca P.

Pearl

22:31

Read by Dianne

The Governor's Hall

16:13

Read by Dianne

The Elf-Child and the Minister

18:33

Read by George Pilling

The Leech

22:08

Read by George Pilling

The Leech and his Patient

23:08

Read by hefyd

The Interior of a Heart

17:33

Read by hefyd

The Minister's Vigil

25:53

Read by hefyd

Another View of Hester

20:13

Read by hefyd

Hester and the Physician

15:08

Read by hefyd

Hester and Pearl

15:30

Read by hefyd

A Forest Walk

14:18

Read by Laurie Anne Walden

The Pastor and his Parishioner

26:41

Read by Christina Boyles

A Flood of Sunshine

14:03

Read by rachelellen

The Child at the Brook-Side

16:29

Read by JemmaBlythe

The Minister in a Maze

21:08

Read by Alex Patterson

The New England Holiday

19:01

Read by Laurie Anne Walden

The Procession

29:14

Read by Christina Boyles

The Revelation of the Scarlet Letter

16:42

Read by Christie Nowak

Conclusion

14:44

Read by JemmaBlythe

Bewertungen

(0,5 Sterne)

This is why there should only be one reader allowed per book, even if there is five didn't recordings of the same book. Then the reader can choose his or her favorite reader for that story. Arg.

horrible reading

(0,5 Sterne)

ugh. what a huge letdown. the first reader was wonderful but it is a crushing disappointment to listen to the second reader butcher the English language and distracting to hear the third reader's heavy accent. I had to buy it to hear it

Come on Librivox!

(1 Sterne)

Pull your socks up and replace the inadequate (and often just sheer ridiculous) readings. We know its a free servuce but thee's no need to allow for the verbal bludgeoning of the world"s literary masterpieces. Remove badly performed work and provide us with ,at t he very least, that which is coherent and not an affront to the ear!

The Scarlet Letter

(3 Sterne)

Well, I had to read this book for school and even though I didn't enjoy it that much it taught me something. So for that, and that alone, it gets 3 stars and it get to be recommended.

great book, lousy reading

(1 Sterne)

This is an amazing book, and deserves better treatment. Some readers were great, but some were totally incomprehensible. please.... one reader to a story.

A hodgepodge of terrible readings

(0,5 Sterne)

I get that it's free. I get that English is a second or third language for some. What I fail to grasp is how someone can be published unintelligibly, or how one can sputter and trip over so many words, and be too lazy to go back and fix their damage. Some readers were great, but unfortunately lose their value to horrible coreaders.

(1 Sterne)

this is not the platform for practicing your 2nd language. honestly I think it's an insult to the author. I'm certain these legendary authors deserve the best narration. I wouldnt complain if I wasn't listening to an English version.the 3rd reader is impossible to understand.

LibriVox Correct your readers!

(1 Sterne)

Whilst some of the readers on this narrative were fine, many completely ruined the listening experience of this book. The second reader couldn’t use punctuation correctly and repeatedly tripped over his words rendering the text incomprehensible. Why are these readers not checked to see if they can read correctly before allowing them to read for LibriVox? Whilst I understand this is a voluntary role and a free app, there should still e some pride in the work you make available for public use.