Resurrection, Book 1
Leo Tolstoy
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Resurrection is the last of Tolstoy's major fiction works published in his lifetime. Tolstoy intended the novel as an exposition of injustice of man-made laws and the hypocrisy of institutionalized church. It was first published serially in the magazine Niva as an effort to raise funds for the resettlement of the Dukhobors. The story concerns a nobleman named Nekhlyudov, who seeks redemption for a sin committed years earlier. His brief affair with a maid resulted in her being fired and ending up in prostitution. The book treats his attempts to help her out of her current misery, but also focuses on his personal mental and moral struggle.(Summary from Wikipedia)
Proof-Listeners: Karen Merline; enko; mim@can (8 hr 51 min)
Kapitel
01 - Maslova in Prison | 9:06 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
02 - Maslova's Early Life | 16:21 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
03 - Nekhludoff | 12:50 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
04 - Missy | 6:19 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
05 - The Jurymen | 6:15 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
06 - The Judges | 7:40 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
07 - The Officials of the Court | 7:19 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
08 - Swearing in the Jury | 7:24 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
09 - The Trial - The Prisoners Questioned | 8:31 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
10 - The Trial - The Indictment | 7:09 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
11 - The Trial - Maslova Cross-Examined | 13:44 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
12 - Twelve Years Before | 12:08 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
13 - Life in the Army | 10:24 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
14 - The Second Meeting with Maslova | 10:20 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
15 - The Early Mass | 11:33 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
16 - The First Step | 7:13 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
17 - Nekhludoff and Katusha | 7:34 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
18 - Afterwards | 6:50 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
19 - The Trial - Resumption | 6:25 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
20 - The Trial - The Medical Report | 8:31 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
21 - The Trial - The Prosecutor and the Advocates | 12:56 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
22 - The Trial - The Summing Up | 8:17 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
23 - The Trial - The Verdict | 17:55 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
24 - The Trial - The Sentence | 6:58 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
25 - Nekhludoff Consults an Advocate | 4:15 | Gelesen von David Barnes |
26 - The House of Korchagin | 12:31 | Gelesen von David Cole |
27 - Missy's Mother | 12:57 | Gelesen von David Cole |
28 - The Awakening | 15:15 | Gelesen von David Cole |
29 - Maslova in Prison | 8:20 | Gelesen von A. Knight |
30 - The Cell | 8:14 | Gelesen von A. Knight |
31 - The Prisoners | 8:01 | Gelesen von A. Knight |
32 - A Prison Quarrel | 9:51 | Gelesen von David Cole |
33 - The Leaven at Work - Nekhludoff's Domestic Changes | 9:29 | Gelesen von David Cole |
34 - The Absurdity of Law - Reflections of a Juryman | 12:31 | Gelesen von David Cole |
35 - The Procureur - Nekhludoff Refuses to Serve | 6:50 | Gelesen von David Cole |
36 - Nekhludoff Endeavours to Visit Maslova | 4:44 | Gelesen von smhamon |
37 - Maslova Recalls the Past | 7:09 | Gelesen von smhamon |
038 - Book 1, Chapter 38 - Sunday in Prison - Preparing for Mass | 4:44 | Gelesen von smhamon |
39 - The Prison Church - Blind Leaders of the Blind | 10:07 | Gelesen von Bob Neufeld |
40 - The Husks of Religion | 7:37 | Gelesen von Bob Neufeld |
41 - Visiting Day - The Men's Ward | 11:42 | Gelesen von Bob Neufeld |
42 - Visiting Day - The Women's Ward | 5:49 | Gelesen von Bob Neufeld |
43 - Nekhludoff Visits Maslova | 14:40 | Gelesen von Bob Neufeld |
44 - Maslova's View of Life | 5:39 | Gelesen von ajju |
45 - Fanarin, the Advocate - The Petition | 15:35 | Gelesen von A. Knight |
46 - A Prison Flogging | 7:13 | Gelesen von A. Knight |
47 - Nekhludoff Again Visits Maslova | 6:24 | Gelesen von David Cole |
48 - Maslova Refuses to Marry | 8:46 | Gelesen von Bob Neufeld |
49 - Vera Doukhova | 7:40 | Gelesen von Bob Neufeld |
50 - The Vice-Governor of the Prison | 9:21 | Gelesen von Bob Neufeld |
51 - The Cells | 7:53 | Gelesen von Bob Neufeld |
52 - Number 21 | 6:28 | Gelesen von David Cole |
53 - Victims of Government | 6:20 | Gelesen von Bob Neufeld |
54 - Prisoners and Friends | 5:44 | Gelesen von ajju |
55 - Vera Doukhova Explains | 6:04 | Gelesen von David Cole |
56 - Nekhludoff and the Prisoners | 6:16 | Gelesen von David Cole |
57 - The Vice-Governor's at Home | 9:50 | Gelesen von David Cole |
58 - The Vice-Governor's Suspicious | 7:07 | Gelesen von Bob Neufeld |
59 - Nekhludoff's Third Interview with Maslova in Prison | 10:34 | Gelesen von Bob Neufeld |
Bewertungen
(The review is on the book as whole)





Hania
People always are stuck in adj, describing, with more and more words what a certain person "is" ... they go on doing that, without noticing how judgemental they may get, and how their judgements are not only cold and remote of objectivity.. they also lack humanity warmth,.. on that path, humans had succeed killing humanity in others, and even in themselves and the so called "ciminals" can be among the list of their victims. But the truth is what Tolstoy had tried to express saying "humans are like rivers.." no one ever had the right to judge then because what he is judging is only a state of the person,.. and since he may not guess how such state had developed, nor why it did, he can not make a just judgment, therefore he have no right to make it.





Charles Kennedy
The book is fantastic and carries every element of Tolstoy’s brilliance. Instead, my review is directed towards the narration. David Barnes does phenomenally- his cadence is measured, his tone is educated and enjoyable. It’s very easy to fall into his rhythm and enter a visualization of the novel. I found that I could remain almost entirely focused, even in distracting settings like transit or work. His pronunciation is clear, confident, and I rarely missed a word during his section. In, contrast, David Cole almost made me give up on the book. His cadence is very inconsistent. He pauses at the wrong points in sentences, even stuttering over words at some points. His sections give the impression that he’s completely unfamiliar with the book, with an unsureness to his pronunciation that makes it far more difficult to remain focused and understand what he is saying. I found the pauses and oral mistakes ripped me from visualization, beyond just being unenjoyable. To voice a more personal opinion as well, I harshly disliked his tone. He uses this Europeanized manner overlayed onto his actual American accent which comes off as performance and disingenuous. His French made me cry. Together, I find his sections difficult to get through. I would often rush those listenings, usually not paying as much attention as the novel deserves, just to listen to another narrator. His sections are contrasted by another fantastic talent, Bob Neufeld. I’ve listened to other recordings by Bob, and he is handily one of my favourites on the platform. Please redo David Cole’s sections of the book, they are bringing down the quality of the recording.
perfect book





Byro
This is my first Tolstoy’s book and I really loved it. I am going to read all of his books in the near future.. I have truly enjoyed all the narrators apart from one that couldn’t understand because of a car horn in the background..
Great Book, lots of natarators





Lydia Lamoreaux
I am loving this book but it does have a ton of different narrators. Some readers are definitely harder to understand as there's a lot of background noise.
Great read





ally
Readers are amazing just 2 of the readers where hard to listen to





A LibriVox Listener
great and profound book! excellent reading!