Celibates
George Moore and George Logan Moore
Read by James E. Carson
The author is considered the first great Irish writer of realist fiction and is said to have been an inspiration for James Joyce. Celibates is a novel of three characters: Mildred Lawson, John Norton and Agnes Lahens.They have nothing in common other than an absolute love of themselves and an inability to sympathize with others. In that vein, it constitutes a striking image of our own modern day self-absorbed society. (Introduction by James Carson) (10 hr 34 min)
Chapters
00 - Introduction | 9:12 | Read by James E. Carson |
01 - Mildred Lawson Chapter I | 10:03 | Read by James E. Carson |
02 - Mildred Lawson Chapter II | 18:45 | Read by James E. Carson |
03 - Mildred Lawson Chapter III | 12:24 | Read by James E. Carson |
04 - Mildred Lawson Chapter IV | 19:32 | Read by James E. Carson |
05 - Mildred Lawson Chapter V | 10:54 | Read by James E. Carson |
06 - Mildred Lawson Chapter VI | 14:32 | Read by James E. Carson |
07 - Mildred Lawson Chapter VII | 16:06 | Read by James E. Carson |
08 - Mildred Lawson Chapter VIII | 4:19 | Read by James E. Carson |
09 - Mildred Lawson Chapter IX | 8:00 | Read by James E. Carson |
10 - Mildred Lawson Chapter X | 5:00 | Read by James E. Carson |
11 - Mildred Lawson Chapter XI | 26:52 | Read by James E. Carson |
12 - Mildred Lawson Chapter XII | 17:38 | Read by James E. Carson |
13 - Mildred Lawson Chapter XIII | 15:21 | Read by James E. Carson |
14 - Mildred Lawson Chapter XIV | 13:45 | Read by James E. Carson |
15 - Mildred Lawson Chapter XV | 17:43 | Read by James E. Carson |
16 - Mildred Lawson Chapter XVI | 18:34 | Read by James E. Carson |
17 - Mildred Lawson Chapter XVII | 30:32 | Read by James E. Carson |
18 - Mildred Lawson Chapter XVIII | 35:37 | Read by James E. Carson |
19 - Mildred Lawson Chapter XIX | 12:32 | Read by James E. Carson |
20 - Mildred Lawson Chapter XX | 29:24 | Read by James E. Carson |
21 - Mildred Lawson Chapter XXI | 13:41 | Read by James E. Carson |
22 - Mildred Lawson Chapter XXII | 6:09 | Read by James E. Carson |
23 - John Norton Chapter I | 11:04 | Read by James E. Carson |
24 - John Norton Chapter II | 26:04 | Read by James E. Carson |
25 - John Norton Chapter III | 12:55 | Read by James E. Carson |
26 - John Norton Chapter IV | 18:12 | Read by James E. Carson |
27 - John Norton Chapter V | 15:08 | Read by James E. Carson |
28 - John Norton Chapter VI | 6:32 | Read by James E. Carson |
29 - John Norton Chapter VII | 8:05 | Read by James E. Carson |
30 - John Norton Chapter VIII | 7:13 | Read by James E. Carson |
31 - John Norton Chapter IX | 8:06 | Read by James E. Carson |
32 - John Norton Chapter X | 2:33 | Read by James E. Carson |
33 - John Norton Chapter XI | 13:53 | Read by James E. Carson |
34 - John Norton Chapter XII | 2:40 | Read by James E. Carson |
35 - John Norton Chapter XIII | 5:26 | Read by James E. Carson |
36 - John Norton Chapter XIV | 11:43 | Read by James E. Carson |
37 - John Norton Chapter XV | 3:31 | Read by James E. Carson |
38 - John Norton Chapter XVI | 5:06 | Read by James E. Carson |
39 - Agnes Lahens Chapter I | 22:46 | Read by James E. Carson |
40 - Agnes Lahens Chapter II | 26:45 | Read by James E. Carson |
41 - Agnes Lahens Chapter III | 18:03 | Read by James E. Carson |
42 - Agnes Lahens Chapter IV | 12:27 | Read by James E. Carson |
43 - Agnes Lahens Chapter V | 17:05 | Read by James E. Carson |
44 - Agnes Lahens Chapter VI | 12:43 | Read by James E. Carson |
Reviews
Intriguing novel
Azfad
I found this a really interesting and psychologically deep novel with overall excellent narration. However, the section that describes the rape of a character suffered from a somewhat hesitant and 'colour-by-numbers' performance, to my ears at least, as if the narrator was only partially familiar with the text, and the emotional impact was dulled. There is also an occasional loud buzzing noise (bad) and birdsong (good) in the background. Despite that, this is a more than fine librivox effort and I recommend it highly.
Buried treasure
Annabel
Moore is remarkable and Carson's understated reading allows listeners to appreciate his wit.