Quest of the Golden Ape
Randall Garrett and Stephen Marlowe
Read by Mark Nelson
How could this man awaken with no past—no childhood—no recollection except of a vague world of terror from which his mother cried out for vengeance and the slaughter of his own people stood as a monument of infamy? - Summary by Gutenberg text
Note: The files list Randall Garrett as author. More recent research has shown this to have been written by Paul W. Fairman and Stephen Marlowe. The audio files have not been changed to reflect the change in author attribution. (4 hr 3 min)
Chapters
01 Mansion of Mystery | 5:33 | Read by Mark Nelson |
02 The Great Clock of Tarth | 8:42 | Read by Mark Nelson |
03 The Man in the Cavern | 8:01 | Read by Mark Nelson |
04 John Pride's Story | 9:43 | Read by Mark Nelson |
05 Question Upon Question | 13:48 | Read by Mark Nelson |
06 On the Plains to Ofrid | 10:21 | Read by Mark Nelson |
07 The White God | 8:36 | Read by Mark Nelson |
08 The Brown Virgin | 20:26 | Read by Mark Nelson |
09 In Custody | 8:35 | Read by Mark Nelson |
10 The Road to Nadia | 10:21 | Read by Mark Nelson |
11 On the Ice Fields of Nadia | 14:16 | Read by Mark Nelson |
12 Volna the Beautiful | 17:29 | Read by Mark Nelson |
13 The Journey of No Return | 29:19 | Read by Mark Nelson |
14 Land Beyond the Stars | 15:49 | Read by Mark Nelson |
15 The Golden Ape | 14:09 | Read by Mark Nelson |
16 The Raging Beast | 22:40 | Read by Mark Nelson |
17 The Prison Without Bars | 25:20 | Read by Mark Nelson |
Reviews
Reads like a lost Burroughs' novel
CoolWhipKid
I had never heard of this book. I was searching a list of books read by Mark Nelson and it sounded interesting. I'm glad I gave it a listen. It is very much in the style of Burroughs' John Carter of Mars and Pellucidar series. It's shorter than I expected and when I was on the final chapter I thought there was no way it would get wrapped up and I assumed I'd be searching for a second book to see it through. Nope, somehow the entire story was completed in the final minutes. Despite the rushed ending the story was intriguing and the characters were colorful. I wish the setting had been fleshed out over 2 or 3 books. The world was imaginative and the characters were just starting to grow on me when everything ended. As always, Mark Nelson is the main attraction. His reading is impeccable and he can transmogrify a mediocre story into a page turner (which is probably in his best interest since he is the one turning the pages).
Mcleod58
great book will read by Mark Nelson great job. I enjoy listening to the book that Mark Nelson narrates. He gives life to the story wonderful.
Just ok.
Seven Archers
I was kind of of disappointed, it felt like I was listening to a abridged retelling of Edgar Rice Burroughs, "John Carter Mars" series. There was nothing remotely unique in the story. Mark Nelson did an excellent job of reading as usual.
The most backward bumbling book I've ever read
A LibriVox Listener
Mark caused me to stick to the end. The hero in this book was so upsetting. He just stumbled his way to the last full stop. He even managed to kill himself... its a No from me Bob....
Last book read by Mark ❤️🩹 I hope there are more to come!
Maynard James Keenan
i have no doubt if Mark narrated it,, and friend from Borneo approved that it can be a bad one ,i can rate this one before even hearing it ✌️👽🖖🇧🇦
Unusual and fascinating
Akku
I really enjoyed this story and the reading was most excellent. it's an interesting and unusual tale with a neat plot twist or two along the way. a fine adventure
Pretty good
Bung
Starts getting a little old toward the end. Good author just not his best book.
David
that was a wonderful book I enjoyed it very much I think you will too David