An Inland Voyage
Robert Louis Stevenson
Lu par LibriVox Volunteers





As a young man, Stevenson wished to be financially independent and began his literary career by writing travelogues. This is his first published work, written at a time when travel for pleasure was still a rarity. He and a friend traveled by canoe through France and Belgium and he relates how they were thrown in jail, mistaken for traveling salesmen and became embroiled in gypsy life. - Summary by Lynne Thompson (3 hr 56 min)
Chapitres
Preface | 3:50 | Lu par Greg Giordano |
Antwerp to Boom | 8:21 | Lu par Kara Shallenberg (1969-2023) |
The Willebroek Canal | 11:46 | Lu par DJRickyV |
The Royal Sport Nautique | 10:33 | Lu par Lynne T |
At Mauberge | 9:02 | Lu par Lynne T |
On The Sambre Canalised | 10:27 | Lu par TheLadyAmy |
Pont-Sur-Sambre -- We Are Pedlars | 11:39 | Lu par Lynne T |
Pont-Sur-Sambre -- The Travelling Merchant | 10:16 | Lu par Alan Mapstone |
On The Sambre Canalised To Landrecies | 10:38 | Lu par Lynne T |
At Landrecies | 8:53 | Lu par Lynne T |
Sambre And Oise Canal -- Canal Boats | 9:56 | Lu par Greg Giordano |
The Oise In Flood | 13:51 | Lu par Phil Schempf |
Origny Sainte-Benoite -- A By-Day | 9:07 | Lu par Denise Nordell |
Origny Sainte-Benoite -- The Company At Table | 9:52 | Lu par Denise Nordell |
Down The Oise To Moy | 11:37 | Lu par Gabriela Cowan |
La Fere Of Cursed Memory | 13:10 | Lu par Gabriela Cowan |
Down The Oise Through The Golden Valley | 4:39 | Lu par Alan Mapstone |
Noyon Cathedral | 10:52 | Lu par DJRickyV |
Down The Oise To Compiegne | 5:06 | Lu par Lynne T |
At Compiegne | 10:06 | Lu par Greg Giordano |
Changed Times | 12:53 | Lu par Greg Giordano |
Down The Oise: Church Interiors | 9:52 | Lu par KHand |
Precy And The Marionnettes | 16:49 | Lu par KHand |
Back To The World | 3:38 | Lu par Greg Giordano |
Critiques
Not one of RLS's best





Tim Jones
I had high hopes of this, having read and enjoyed other books by Stevenson, and having traveled through France and done some canoe touring myself. However, despite some good passages and occasional insights, this book features far too many long digressions into the author's sometimes rambling thoughts. The quality of the readings is mixed: some are fairly good, but others are hard to follow. The penultimate chapter includes a passage in French - a language which I understand - but the reader clearly had no idea how to pronounce it, with the result that I understood barely a quarter of the words. It may seem churlish to criticize readers who have kindly volunteered their time like this, but I really wish they would ensure they would check that they are up to reading the text before agreeing to read it.
TEDIOUS





Avid Listener
It has its moments, but they are few and far between.