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The Sea-Witch

Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers

(4 Sterne; 12 Bewertungen)

Maturin Murray Ballou was the author of dozens of books, chiefly centered around his extensive sea travel. He was deputy navy-agent in the Boston Custom House and circumnavigated in 1882, collecting material for several travel accounts and various nautical romances, amongst which The Sea-Witch can be counted. (Summary by Gesine) (4 hr 21 min)

Chapters

Preface

1:22

Read by woggy298

Outward Bound

11:30

Read by woggy298

Captain Will Ratlin

13:25

Read by woggy298

The Gale

10:08

Read by woggy298

Bramble Park

14:52

Read by woggy298

The Naval Officer

15:27

Read by woggy298

The Wreck

16:06

Read by woggy298

The Sea-Witch

14:25

Read by woggy298

The Quadroon

15:48

Read by woggy298

The Attack

16:00

Read by woggy298

The Duel

15:16

Read by woggy298

The Hues of Love

15:19

Read by Todd Lennon

The Conflict

15:47

Read by Todd Lennon

The Trial

11:53

Read by Caryn Salamy

The Brothers

16:04

Read by Elliott Miller

The Escape

15:18

Read by Elliott Miller

The Cannibals

16:16

Read by Elliott Miller

The Poisoned Barb

15:48

Read by Elliott Miller

The Denouement

10:44

Read by Elliott Miller

Bewertungen

LOVED IT

(5 Sterne)

I loved this, but anything about the sea is my cup of nautical tea!

Bad Book can't be helped

(2 Sterne)

Book Stars = 2 (generous at that) Readers Stars = 3 (ranging from 2 to 5) Technical Stars = 3 (the usual overmic’d “S” hiss and other noises) Ballou spewed out 18 novels from 1845-50. You've heard nothing of his other 17 and the world would be better had not this one inexplicably endured. This book shows that his approach was volume with tabloid quality. Thin, linear plot, flat characters, little detail of interest; it's a bad B-movie script. Two brothers (one good, the other evil), two young women (one white, rich and sappily pure; the other mixed-race, vengeful, evil). The dialog and pretense are quintessential Victorian “crud”. It is obliviously racist and imperialist. I won't "ruin" the story for you but don't expect literature or interest. To all readers: Thank you for volunteering. I say this in support of your efforts. Because the words are provided you, it is natural for you to concentrate on your style of delivery rather than vocabulary. However, the Librivox system requires you to self-edit, which is difficult but essential. Your effort's quality can be greatly improved with just a few minutes of online pronunciation checking. In this ensemble reading, we have errors in, for example, "ascertain", "tryst", "draught", and several more 9th grade words, as well as in nautical words forecastle, bows, mainsail, topsail, staysail, foresail, and topgallant.