The Mutiny of the Elsinore
Jack London
Gelesen von Tom Crawford





This is the story of a voyage of a sailing ship from Baltimore to Seattle, east-to-west around Cape Horn in the winter. It is set in 1913 and the glory days of “wooden ships and iron men” are long over. The Elsinore is a four-masted iron sailing vessel carrying a cargo of 5000 tons of coal. She has a “bughouse” crew of misfits and incompetents.
This book was published in 1915 and some actions of some of the characters seem odd to us today. There is romance, but it is strangely platonic. Two important characters disappear with no real explanation. The disparity between the officers on the one hand and the fo’c’sle on the other is striking (literally). Some people will be offended by the bigotry.
The “men against the sea” descriptions -and the weather descriptions- are among Jack London’s finest. In my opinion he is right up there with Joseph Conrad and Joshua Slocum in this effort. We also have a mutiny, complete with shootings and deliberate starvation. My personal favorite is chapter 38.
Note: The chapter titles were assigned by the reader. London gave only numbers. (Introduction by Tom Crawford) (0 hr 29 min)
Kapitel
01: I Don't Play Chopsticks | 16:14 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
02: Mister Pike | 16:46 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
03: The Greek Overboard | 11:01 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
04: About Captain West | 8:03 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
05: A Bughouse Crew | 16:46 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
06: My Accomodations | 10:00 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
07: We Never Discuss Sailors | 11:12 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
08: Making Sail | 14:24 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
09: Either a Calm or Northeast Gale | 18:40 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
10: Mister Mellaire | 16:21 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
11: Captain West is No Conversationalist | 10:52 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
12: Captain West is a Samurai | 9:51 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
13: Bedbugs! | 19:27 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
14: Mulligan Jacobs | 17:07 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
15: O'Sulllivan Used a Razor | 16:25 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
16: Possum Has a Fit | 12:10 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
17: The Gangsters in the Forecastle | 16:04 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
18: The Greek Overboard Again | 12:21 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
19: The Daughters of Herodias | 10:29 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
20: Miss West is Never Idle | 11:39 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
21: Charles Davis Murdered O'Sullivan | 9:32 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
22: Captain West Reprimands Mister Mellaire | 8:33 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
23: Two Sharks | 9:44 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
24: Sidney Maltham | 10:09 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
25: Rats | 6:46 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
26: Slaves and Masters | 5:47 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
27: "Oh Dear, oh dear" | 8:35 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
28: Off the River Plate | 21:43 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
29: A Sunset and Elsinore on Her Side | 13:45 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
30: Number Three Hatch | 23:43 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
31: She is Margaret | 16:14 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
32: Old Stiff | 9:05 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
33: Twenty-eight Point Six Four | 18:44 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
34: Aloft in a Gale | 11:25 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
35: A Cask and Three Devils | 31:41 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
36: ...And no Westing | 11:33 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
37: I have Found the Love of Woman | 13:38 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
38: Did the Samurai Make a Mistake? | 28:31 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
39: And God Help the Man That Don't Jump | 12:09 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
40: We Make Westing | 17:35 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
41: We Are Around the Horn | 6:06 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
42: The Mutiny of the Elsinore | 32:45 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
43: Twenty-seven of Them Against Eleven of Us | 21:27 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
44: Where Do They Get Their Food? | 16:47 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
45: Our First Truce | 14:46 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
46: A Navigator Aft | 13:00 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
47: Two Assaults and an Ambush | 15:15 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
48: Rough-on-Rats | 9:51 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
49: Sulfuric Acid and Sulfur Fumes | 23:50 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
50: The Final Chapter | 31:08 | Gelesen von Tom Crawford |
Bewertungen
Volunteer Readers Could Learn From Tom





Donald R Miller
Tom Crawford has one of the most important things going for him that any volunteer might want--and that is the wisdom to know which stories his voice is best suited for reading. His voice is perfect for reading stories about rugged manly men who wouldn't easily fit into a business suit. Thanks Tom!
adventure





Oliver
great reading, love and character
love the reader's chapter headings





Darlene Boda
I'd give it five stars if London had edited out the narrator's intrusive thoughts about the captain's daughter. Hearing over and over, "she is a woman, and she is desirable" was somehow worse than his occasional racial reasoning toward the end that the blonder the hair and the lighter the eyes obviously equaled the right of rulership. White Fang's mother to the rescue, the narrator obviously needs to get eaten....
A Ripping yarn of the sea, replete with the casual racism.





BeWell Garforth
Good balanced reading, a few mispronuciations of French names, but overall good pacing and easy to listen to. A knowledgeable account of sailing, with good characterisation and convincing action. How far the narrator's views of natural hierarchy and racial theory are those of the author remain unclear. Though the author does recount the dreadful conditions and excessive brutality that led to the mutiny.





wrenn jenny
Not my fav Jack London- a bit slower of a book but still interesting. While I do appreciate the volunteer readers, this gentleman's saliva smacking throughout the book was very distracting. Perhaps taking a drink of water prior to reading may help?
Great story,well read.





Paul Busman
The man definitely knew how to write a story! I'm a big fan of sea stories and this one is terrific. There's a lot of nautical terminology which some readers might want to look up..





Rick Matheson
thank you very much fine folks. Rick mathison Virginia Minnesota, North country of minors now and White pine loggers of past it is a tough land.
it was a great book I loved it. I liked the reader it seemed very real like I w…





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