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The Four Just Men

Gelesen von Andy Sames

(4,292 Sterne; 12 Bewertungen)

In the atmosphere of political turmoil before the First World War it seemed there were villains, spies and anarchists around every corner. Some believed that the normal avenues of Law and Order were not well enough equipped to deal with such miscreants, but there are four just men who keep a vigil. Foreign Secretary Sir Philip Ramon receives a letter signed 'Four Just Men': “The Bill that you are about to pass into law is an unjust one …". This group of men is notorious and feared as they have already brought retribution to those believed guilty of crimes but are outside the reach of the law (their arm is longer and they always deliver capital justice). The Alien Extradition Bill, Ramon's cherished idea, will create barriers for those that the FJM see as forces for good, so Ramon must redact it or be himself 'removed'. A cat and mouse game ensues between the FJM and Scotland Yard, broadcast to the public by an excited press. The story is played out in two parts: Part 1 The Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs; Part 2 The Council of Justice. (Summary by Andy Sames) (9 hr 51 min)

Chapters

Thery's Trade

13:19

Read by Andy Sames

A Newspaper Story

15:11

Read by Andy Sames

The Faithful Commons

16:23

Read by Andy Sames

One Thousand Pounds Reward

19:43

Read by Andy Sames

Preperations

19:49

Read by Andy Sames

The Outrage at the Megaphone

26:56

Read by Andy Sames

The Clues

24:26

Read by Andy Sames

The Messenger of the Four

26:29

Read by Andy Sames

The Pocket Book

24:56

Read by Andy Sames

The Cupidity of Marks

30:50

Read by Andy Sames

Three Who Died

26:11

Read by Andy Sames

A Newspaper Cutting

16:37

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Conclusion

10:16

Read by Andy Sames

P2 Chapter 1 The Red Hundred

25:53

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P2 Chapter 2 The Fourth Man

23:11

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P2 Chapter 3 Jessen Alias Long

22:19

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P2 Chapter 4 The Red Bean

24:26

Read by Andy Sames

P2 Chapter 5 The Council of Justice

19:36

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P2 Chapter 6 Princess Revolutionary

15:52

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P2 Chapter 7 The Government and Mr. Jessen

14:41

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P2 Chapter 8 An Incident in the Fight

13:00

Read by Andy Sames

P2 Chapter 9 The Four vs. The Hundred

10:56

Read by Andy Sames

P2 Chapter 10 The Trial

21:53

Read by Andy Sames

P2 Chapter 11 Manfred

18:08

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P2 Chapter 12 In Wandsworth Jail

24:23

Read by Andy Sames

P2 Chapter 13 The "Rational Faithers"

13:44

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P2 Chapter 14 At The Old Bailey

26:27

Read by Andy Sames

P2 Chapter 15 Chelmsford

24:32

Read by Andy Sames

P2 Chapter 16 The Execution

21:40

Read by Andy Sames

Bewertungen

White Power Fantasy

(2,5 Sterne)

The novel is an artefact from the height of European imperial power. Just imagine a world where four white, extremely rich men could act with the impunity of Batman, or of Iron Man, or His Majesty's 007 super assassin and his handlers. Rich in sardonic humor, it seems plain that Manfred represents the ethical sentiments of the author as it concerns murder as social service. Presupposing the inherent superiority of The Four Just Men and their ethical indemnity, compared to the complacency and mediocrity of the public, is Nietzschean in outlook and thrust. The racist biases underpinning the novel are largely taken for granted. As a novel, it is not one of Wallace's better ones, as it is devoted more to philosophy than story. It reminds me of Ayn Rand, right down to the attempted rescue near the end of Atlas Shrugged and I would not be surprised if this was in her reading background. As an artefact for critical study, it's illuminating, but not good. The reader did well, the sound editing is a bit intrusive.

(5 Sterne)

This is a really fun anti-hero book. I really enjoyed every minute of it! Great reader!

(5 Sterne)

Thoroughly enjoyable and well read, although the audio quality is very uneven at times.

(5 Sterne)

What a wonderful reader! And the book is a spellbinder.