The Lady's Mile
Mary Elizabeth Braddon
Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers





If you drive through the Lady's Mile, the most fashionable district in London, you will see people whose most distinguished ambition was to be known in that circle. A novelist, a painter, and some aristocrats, willing to prove themselves to the world. But what happens behind closed doors? Is the Lady's Mile as respectable as it seems? - Summary by Stav Nisser. (16 hr 54 min)
Kapitel
He is but a landscape-painter | 34:51 | Gelesen von Elsie Selwyn |
Lord Aspendell's daughter | 32:24 | Gelesen von Elsie Selwyn |
Hector | 41:02 | Gelesen von Elsie Selwyn |
Love and duty | 16:24 | Gelesen von Riley McGuire |
At the fountains | 44:06 | Gelesen von Jim Locke |
Wedding cards | 11:11 | Gelesen von Jim Locke |
The great O'Boyneville | 41:33 | Gelesen von Jim Locke |
The dowager's little dinner | 29:03 | Gelesen von Jim Locke |
Laurence O'Boyneville's first hearing | 26:52 | Gelesen von Jim Locke |
The rich Mr. Lobyer | 37:00 | Gelesen von Lynda Marie Neilson |
At Nasedale | 33:12 | Gelesen von Lynda Marie Neilson |
Mr. O'Boyneville's motion for a new trial | 33:34 | Gelesen von Lynda Marie Neilson |
Cecil's honeymoon | 38:47 | Gelesen von Lynda Marie Neilson |
Mr. Lobyer's wooing | 42:14 | Gelesen von Lynda Marie Neilson |
Delilah | 29:21 | Gelesen von Jim Locke |
At home in Bloomsbury | 27:13 | Gelesen von Jim Locke |
Poor Philip | 31:44 | Gelesen von Jim Locke |
Too late for repentance | 27:23 | Gelesen von Jim Locke |
Tidings from India | 34:34 | Gelesen von Jim Locke |
At Pevenshall Place | 17:02 | Gelesen von Jim Locke |
Sir Nugent Evershed | 30:55 | Gelesen von Jim Locke |
Mrs. Lobyer's skeleton | 46:40 | Gelesen von Jim Locke |
How should I greet thee? | 36:23 | Gelesen von Jim Locke |
Between Carthage and Kensington | 31:41 | Gelesen von Jim Locke |
The easy descent | 38:38 | Gelesen von Kathleen Moore |
A modern love-chase | 17:07 | Gelesen von Kathleen Moore |
He comes too near, who comes to be denied | 29:21 | Gelesen von Kathleen Moore |
Were all thy letters suns, I could not see | 15:08 | Gelesen von Kathleen Moore |
A timely warning | 17:48 | Gelesen von Kathleen Moore |
He's sweetest friend, or hardest foe | 12:53 | Gelesen von Kathleen Moore |
On the brink | 35:14 | Gelesen von Jim Locke |
By the sea | 23:30 | Gelesen von Jim Locke |
A commercial earthquake | 38:47 | Gelesen von Jim Locke |
The epilogue | 10:51 | Gelesen von Jim Locke |
Bewertungen
Technically, it's a happy ending...





Phxjennifer
...but somehow everyone just seems pretty depressed by the time this book grinds, sloooowly , to a finish. Part of the effect is due to the narration. Both main narrators tend toward the mechanical and monotone, and both of them have issues with incorrect pronunciation in English. ( I don't speak French, so I can't judge that.) I imagine the extra effort the listener needs to put in to figure out what's being said can make the book seem much longer.





Joyful
Thank you for reading this book. Cecil should have organized a Ladies Afternoon Book Club or even had a couple of children. That would have helped her find fulfillment in her life so she didn’t have to consider being unfaithful to her husband. He did love her in his own way, and she did take an oath before God, to love him and be faithful to him. joyfuljoyful@hotmail.com
good story but reader Locke difficult to listen to





A LibriVox Listener
To Locke, I can tell this is an important volunteer activity. please consider taking a class on good story reading techniques