The Red and the Black, Volume II
Stendhal
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
Stendhal - a German pen-name for a French writer who hated the English. Contemporary to some of the great names of French literature like Balzac and Flaubert, Stendhal is quite often considered a writer that doesn't seem to fit a defined genre. Some say he's a Romantic, others that he's a Modernist and that Le Rouge et Le Noir is the first modern novel. On one point they are all agreed: the novel is a masterpiece that shows a young theology student - Julien Sorel - intelligent, handsome and who is determined to rise above his humble peasant origins. Stendhal presents the reader with a satirical plot that will involve you in passions, intrigues, last-minute reversals and, mostly, the hypocrisy by which society operates. (Summary by sailormoon) (0 hr 15 min)
Chapters
01 - The Pleasures of the Country | 30:21 | Read by Malone |
02 - Entry into society | 20:36 | Read by Leni |
03 - The First Steps | 8:20 | Read by Leni |
04 - The Hotel De La Mole | 37:05 | Read by Malone |
05 - Sensibility and a Great Pious Lady | 8:56 | Read by Malone |
06 - Pronounciation | 19:50 | Read by Malone |
07 - An Attack of Gout | 22:22 | Read by Malone |
08 - What is the decoration which confers distinction? | 30:31 | Read by Malone |
09 - The Ball | 24:59 | Read by Malone |
10 - Queen Marguerite | 20:24 | Read by Lynne T |
11 - A Young Girl's Dominion | 12:23 | Read by Malone |
12 - Is he a Danton? | 17:38 | Read by Malone |
13 - A Plot | 26:38 | Read by Malone |
14 - A Young Girl's Thoughts | 17:00 | Read by Malone |
15 - Is it a Plot? | 12:38 | Read by madcappe |
16 - One o'clock in the morning | 16:06 | Read by madcappe |
17 - An old Sword | 11:29 | Read by madcappe |
18 - Cruel Moments | 13:54 | Read by madcappe |
19 - The Opera Bouffe | 24:21 | Read by madcappe |
20 - The Japanese Vase | 15:49 | Read by madcappe |
21 - The Secret Note | 12:35 | Read by Chiquito Crasto |
22 - The Discussion | 19:59 | Read by Chiquito Crasto |
23 - The Clergy, The Forests, Liberty | 19:40 | Read by Chiquito Crasto |
24 - Strasbourg | 15:03 | Read by Chiquito Crasto |
25 - The Ministry of Virtue | 15:40 | Read by Chiquito Crasto |
26 - Moral Love | 8:52 | Read by Chiquito Crasto |
27 - The finest places in the church | 8:02 | Read by Chiquito Crasto |
28 - Manon Lescaut | 10:00 | Read by Chiquito Crasto |
29 - Ennui | 8:27 | Read by Chiquito Crasto |
30 - A Box at the Bouffes | 10:43 | Read by Chiquito Crasto |
31 - Frighten her | 11:27 | Read by meridiculous |
32 - The Tiger | 12:25 | Read by Lynne T |
33 - The Hell of Weakness | 11:23 | Read by Rapunzelina |
34 - A Man of Intellect | 13:51 | Read by Rapunzelina |
35 - A Storm | 13:45 | Read by rookieblue |
36 - Sad Details | 17:11 | Read by Lynne T |
37 - A Turret | 10:06 | Read by Rapunzelina |
38 - A Powerful Man | 13:21 | Read by Rapunzelina |
39 - The Intrigue | 10:24 | Read by Rapunzelina |
40 - Tranquility | 9:30 | Read by Rapunzelina |
41 - The Trial | 20:37 | Read by Malone |
42 - Chapter 72 | 14:20 | Read by Nadine Eckert-Boulet |
43 - Chapter 73 | 15:03 | Read by Malone |
44 - Chapter 74 | 21:25 | Read by Malone |
45 - Chapter 75 | 20:17 | Read by Malone |
Reviews
duncalino
A LibriVox Listener
Book gets 5 stars...most of the readers are fabulous but for the end. This is a masterpiece which had me hypnotized throughout volume one and two.....until the final dramatic conclusion when I had to stop listening because of the reader. How can it be that the final conclusion and wrap up of a 2 volume masterpiece is randomly assigned to a reader without regard to the listener experience? I understand and agree that LibriVox should be open to one and all. We are not all meant to readers at the expense of the listeners. Instead of listening I had to get a book and read the end
a worthy satire
free LeonardPeltier
For some time the main character kept me intrigued but after about the middle of volume two, I became tired of his inability to maintain a settled state of his emotions for more than a few hours. There were periods of time where his prospects changed so rapidly that he alternated between murderous hate and romantic passion and between ecstatic triumph one minute to serious thoughts of suicide the next. As the novel progressed past the middle of the second volume, I found myself becoming less sympathetic and more annoyed with character. What did continue to be amusing were his romantic relationships, so that they became more satirical. For me the most admirable value of the novel was that of an excellent satire of the social culture and morals of the period. The plot itself was too drawn out and repetitive in a way that seemed to detract from what I was expecting to be a great artistic undertaking. Since I liked reading Trollope and Wilkie Collins very much, I cannot be prejudiced toward lengthiness. However I would have given this a higher rating, if it had been shortened by 25 per cent or more.
one of the best books of all time
adam
This is a great book. I loved it, will read it again probably and think Stendhal was a genius. Heck, even the great Nietzsche thought very highly of him. Amazing detail, a picture of a book. Worth every minute.
I don’t know what to say . . .
Unknown
To speak much about the story might be a spoiler. Mostly well read, especially by Malone.
Lady Lymon
the novel is outstanding but please use narrators that can pronounce,French proper names