The Food of the Gods and How it Came to Earth
H. G. Wells
Leído por Alex C. Telander





Two stuffy English scientists, always looking to further their scientific knowledge, create a substance called Herakleophorbia, which in its fourth incarnation – known as Herakleophorbia IV – has the special ability of making things increase greatly in size. As the scientists begin experimentation on some chicks, the substance is misused by some “country folk” who don’t take it seriously and soon Herakleophorbia IV is running rampant throughout England and then across the globe, creating giant plants and animals that wreak havoc on the land and then the people. Then the first giant babies are revealed and for the first time humanity has to contend with the existence of a new race of giant people. How humanity deals with this shocking new creation is revealed in The Food of the Gods and How it Came to Earth. (Summary by Alex C. Telander) (6 hr 16 min)
Capítulos
Bk. 1, Ch. 1 - The Discovery of the Food | 15:35 | Leído por Alex C. Telander |
Bk. 1, Ch. 2 - The Experimental Farm | 49:59 | Leído por Alex C. Telander |
Bk. 1, Ch. 3 - The Giant Rats | 51:09 | Leído por Alex C. Telander |
Bk. 1, Ch. 4 - The Giant Children | 42:09 | Leído por Alex C. Telander |
Bk. 1, Ch. 5 - The Minimificence of Mr. Bensington | 18:18 | Leído por Alex C. Telander |
Bk. 2, Ch. 1 - The Coming of the Food | 30:47 | Leído por Alex C. Telander |
Bk. 2, Ch. 2 - The Brat Gigantic | 26:39 | Leído por Alex C. Telander |
Bk. 3, Ch. 1 - The Altered World | 38:13 | Leído por Alex C. Telander |
Bk. 3, Ch. 2 - The Giant Lovers | 27:56 | Leído por Alex C. Telander |
Bk. 3, Ch. 3 - Young Caddles in London | 21:02 | Leído por Alex C. Telander |
Bk. 3, Ch. 4 - Redwood's Two Days | 29:54 | Leído por Alex C. Telander |
Bk. 3, Ch. 5 - The Giant Leaguer | 24:58 | Leído por Alex C. Telander |
Reseñas
Wellsian dystopia





Sparrowdeplume
A commentary that's relevant today about our lack of understanding about complexity and carelessness that leads to the creation of giant plants, people and wildlife and their damage to the ecosystem. Slightly flat and rushed narration but consistent.
Interesting book, reading is fine





Lucy_k_p
This book has some very entertaining moments and the premise is fascinating. However it lacks focus at times and I felt the ending fizzled out disappointingly. It's worth a listen, but the best bits are the action sequences in the middle, rather than the philosophical pondering of the ending. The reading is quite fast, which took me a little while to get used to, but once I had settled in to listening I had no problems understanding. And some of the character voices used are effective and atmospheric. Thank you Alex for making this book available.
The Food of the Gods - H.G.Wells





squirrel99
A nice peice of science fiction by the master. Humorious in the beginning, serious in the end, with a wonderful discussion of "greatness and smallness" through out. The story echos some of the complaints one hears today about modern scientific research. The reader tends to read quickly and without a lot of inflection.





Randomness
it was a good book. the reader on the other hand ramble through the whole entire book. it was hard to enjoy the book do to the reader rushing to finish the book





A LibriVox Listener
Great book to relax to and take your mind off of other things. I'm sorry, the reading wasn't "fine" for me. Seriously, please slow down!!!
sorry but reader was terrible. Sounds like a schoolboy rushing a





A LibriVox Listener
just does not fit with the story.
Poor reading





James
Reading was very difficult to understand and ultimately made me stop listening part way through.
very interesting and thought provoking book





Niko Pantanizopoulos
Well read, though not great. just average