The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
Anne Brontë
Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers





The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, the second and final novel by Anne Brontë, is concerned with the story of a woman who leaves her abusive, dissolute husband, and who must then support herself and her young son. Originally published in June of 1848, it challenged the prevailing morals of the time; a critic went so far as to pronounce it "utterly unfit to be put into the hands of girls." It is considered to be one of the first feminist novels. (Summary from Wikipedia) (18 hr 14 min)
Kapitel
Author's Preface | 7:45 | Gelesen von Gesine |
Chapter I | 28:05 | Gelesen von Ana Simão |
Chapter II | 13:58 | Gelesen von Robin Cotter |
Chapter III | 19:17 | Gelesen von Marie Manis |
Chapter IV | 22:48 | Gelesen von Marie Manis |
Chapter V | 9:59 | Gelesen von Marie Manis |
Chapter VI | 17:30 | Gelesen von bccme |
Chapter VII | 31:24 | Gelesen von Ana Simão |
Chapter VIII | 14:01 | Gelesen von Maire Rhode |
Chapter IX | 27:28 | Gelesen von Deb Bacon-Ziegler |
Chapter X | 12:03 | Gelesen von Deb Bacon-Ziegler |
Chapter XI | 12:02 | Gelesen von Deb Bacon-Ziegler |
Chapter XII | 23:53 | Gelesen von Marie Manis |
Chapter XIII | 9:38 | Gelesen von Michelle Crandall |
Chapter XIV | 16:26 | Gelesen von Ana Simão |
Chapter XV | 18:04 | Gelesen von Ana Simão |
Chapter XVI | 28:14 | Gelesen von Ana Simão |
Chapter XVII | 20:24 | Gelesen von Susie G. |
Chapter XVIII | 30:10 | Gelesen von Susie G. |
Chapter XIX | 16:53 | Gelesen von Alison Raouf |
Chapter XX | 18:24 | Gelesen von Larysa Jaworski |
Chapter XXI | 9:43 | Gelesen von Michelle Crandall |
Chapter XXII | 32:26 | Gelesen von Melissa |
Chapter XXIII | 12:57 | Gelesen von Ana Simão |
Chapter XXIV | 20:27 | Gelesen von Ana Simão |
Chapter XXV | 27:20 | Gelesen von Susie G. |
Chapter XXVI | 8:06 | Gelesen von Susie G. |
Chapter XXVII | 20:55 | Gelesen von Andrea |
Chapter XXVIII | 6:44 | Gelesen von J. M. Smallheer |
Chapter XXIX | 12:15 | Gelesen von J. M. Smallheer |
Chapter XXX | 22:52 | Gelesen von J. M. Smallheer |
Chapter XXXI | 23:25 | Gelesen von J. M. Smallheer |
Chapter XXXII | 30:42 | Gelesen von Ana Simão |
Chapter XXXIII | 33:05 | Gelesen von Ana Simão |
Chapter XXXIV | 12:05 | Gelesen von Ana Simão |
Chapter XXXV | 17:47 | Gelesen von Laura Koskinen |
Chapter XXXVI | 14:40 | Gelesen von Laura Koskinen |
Chapter XXXVII | 32:10 | Gelesen von Laura Koskinen |
Chapter XXXVIII | 30:52 | Gelesen von Laura Koskinen |
Chapter XXXIX | 38:49 | Gelesen von Laura Koskinen |
Chapter XL | 11:53 | Gelesen von Ana Simão |
Chapter XLI | 16:56 | Gelesen von Ana Simão |
Chapter XLII | 12:21 | Gelesen von Ana Simão |
Chapter XLIII | 18:10 | Gelesen von Ana Simão |
Chapter XLIV | 20:42 | Gelesen von Wina Hathaway |
Chapter XLV | 32:54 | Gelesen von Psuke Bariah |
Chapter XLVI | 16:40 | Gelesen von Laura Caldwell |
Chapter XLVII | 34:22 | Gelesen von Ana Simão |
Chapter XLVIII | 15:11 | Gelesen von Ana Simão |
Chapter XLIX | 28:13 | Gelesen von Ana Simão |
Chapter L | 22:11 | Gelesen von Psuke Bariah |
Chapter LI | 19:16 | Gelesen von Psuke Bariah |
Chapter LII | 13:12 | Gelesen von Psuke Bariah |
Chapter LIII | 27:10 | Gelesen von Psuke Bariah |
Bewertungen
Very Poor Reading of a Good Romance





Dragonflyer
This is a very good book for those of us who like this genre, but there are many, many chapters that are impossible to even understand (so I read those online) because of the poor English of one of the foreign readers. If the book had been read by an articulate reader(s), I would have ranked it 4 or 5.
Great job by all readers





dahszil
ahh...this heaven thing and living this life for the afterlife...sigh. and is not a mere fallible human being hypocritical for being a "jesus freak"? I have found that people who spend there time striving to be an ascetic, etc become nastier as the years go by. I remember the nuns in grammar school. How uncomfortable they were in their stiff "penguin garb" and how out of nowhere could burst in rage and wack some poor fellow schoolmate over the head with the chalkboard pointer. anyway eternal heaven seems like a pretty boring, horribly boring thing. if there is any next life, i think reincarnation would be a lot "cooler", likeable. This is a precious free service. If you do not like accents or what you call "poor readers" than go buy the audiobook. I wonder how many of my fellow anglophones would feel under such petty, trivial"criticism"? Good job by all the readers. Especially those whose english is a second language. I doubt there are very many english speaking listeners here, including myself, who could perform as well if they had to read in their second language. I have found that most foreigners(sans perhaps the French, but there is an historical background...)are very tolerant while an english speaker is trying to communicate in their countries. But while here in the Anglophone world, especially in "my country usa, in general people are not sympathetic or even down right rude to foreigners who speak "americanese" or english with some trouble or just because they have an accent. And in all probability there are many more foreigners who speak english better than most of us can speak theirs. alas, it would be no surprise that most of you critics are monolingual anglophones just like me.
Classic of a Tormented Life





MarLea
Spellbinding story from beginning to the end, as there were so many twists and turns I didn’t know how it would turn out. Having never read The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, I was appreciative of having it read to me, as it was so lengthy. I do wish, however, that the reader would be male for the majority of the story which is his perspective, and female for the portions which were hers. It would have been helpful to me to have made a diagram of characters, as it is difficult to keep up with them all and their names and relations with each other. Perhaps having a book nearby would have assisted me in understanding some of the text as well, when the readers do not have English as a first language. Overall an excellent book and I highly recommend it.
I Wish There Were More Like This





Barbie Chyqa
The story is nice and quite different from what her sisters wrote. She seems much saner than the other two. It gives a glimpse into 19th century English society that we don't get from most books set in that time period.the readers did a good job. There's one with a thick European accent that's very difficult to understand. I can't complain much because all these volunteers make it possible to enjoy such books





B
Not big on romance stories but this is different. Real struggles and emotions. She’s got faithful commitment to her faith and husband despite the difficulties. She fights for what will be best for her son without sacrificing her moral beliefs…inspiring. I loved it!





A LibriVox Listener
Loved the story but agree with the other reviews regarding the reader with the very heavy accent. She was difficult understand and I had to really concentrate on listening to her instead of relaxing and passively listening.
Tenant of Wildfell Hall





Pam
More than half of the recordings were read by someone who did not speak English well and thus,were very hard to understand.
Another Version Available





librivoxbooks
Those who find difficulty understanding some readers may enjoy the dramatic reading of this book better: https://archive.org/details/tenant_wildfell_hall_1208_librivox