The House of the White Shadows
B. J. Farjeon and B. L. Farjeon
Read by Roger Melin
Is a defense attorney bound to defend his client, or with his conscience, when he knows that the man he is defending is guilty of the charges against him after the trial has already commenced? And if friends hold a belief that he may have been aware of it before the trial commenced, yet they are endeared to the man and his family as upstanding and of the highest grade? Might it not become cause for blackmail, and therefore potential retribution? "The House of White Shadows" brings these issues to the forefront, while the reader learns of the background of the advocate, his family history, and the house in question. The characters in the story, the history of the house, the truth behind the white shadows are all woven together in a fascinating manner to be brought to fruition as the books progress with dramatic insight and understanding.
Mr. Farjeon's style is remarkable for its vivid realism. The London "Athenæum" in a long and appreciative review styles him "a master of realistic fiction." On account of his sentiment and minute characterization he is regarded as a follower of the method of Dickens. No writer since that master can picture like Farjeon the touching and pathetic type of innocent childhood, pure in spite of miserable and squalid surroundings. He can paint, too, a scene of sombre horror so vividly that even Dickens himself could scarcely emulate its realism. (Summary from preface and by Roger Melin) (16 hr 47 min)
Chapters
Book 1, Chapters 1-3 | 33:12 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 1, Chapters 4-5 | 35:44 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 1, Chapters 6-7 | 34:55 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 1, Chapters 8-9 | 34:04 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 1, Chapters 10-11 | 29:37 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 1, Chapters 12-13 | 31:27 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 1, Chapters 14-15 | 24:02 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 1, Chapters16-17 | 27:27 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 2, Chapters 1-2 | 18:02 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 2, Chapters 3-4 | 21:39 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 3, Chapters 1-3 | 41:01 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 3, Chapters 4-5 | 29:32 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 3, Chapters 6-7 | 43:44 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 3, Chapters 8-9 | 20:55 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 3, Chapters 10-11 | 28:53 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 3, Chapters 12-13 | 35:48 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 4, Chapters 1-2 | 40:54 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 4, Chapters 3-4 | 35:18 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 4, Chapters 5-6 | 25:18 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 4, Chapters 7-8 | 25:35 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 4, Chapters 9-10 | 19:38 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 4, Chapters 11-12 | 42:11 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 4, Chapters 13-14 | 25:09 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 4, Chapters 15-16 | 30:57 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 4, Chapter 17 | 21:31 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 5, Chapters 1-3 | 24:16 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 5, Chapters 4-6 | 40:17 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 6, Chapters 1-3 | 34:30 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 6, Chapters 4-7 | 49:07 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 7, Chapter 1 | 20:59 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 7, Chapter 2 | 27:01 | Read by Roger Melin |
Book 7, Chapters 3-5 | 55:13 | Read by Roger Melin |
Reviews
one of my favorite readers
Ms. Elizabeth
2018 - The more times I listen to this, the more I like it. Even though it has a sad ending (which I avoid), I am pleased that forgiveness abounds. Parts that touched me the most was the childs attempts to put his parents together. I enjoyed the other plots and past history stories intertwined. There wasn't a lot of repetition of feeling.
C
Reminiscent of Wilkie Collins, seasoned by a Dickensian climax. however, it's not either of those literary giants. but certainly worth the listening for those who like Victorian fiction.
Cindy Barnett
Liked the plot (until the end) and the reader (always.). Reader gets ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️🌟
Jolly Robin
Stay with this story, it does "come together". Well read
CC
Thoughtful engaging story. Great reader too. Thank you!