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The Black Prophet: A Tale of Irish Famine

Gelesen von James E. Carson

(3,962 Sterne; 13 Bewertungen)

A story about the Irish, just before the onset of the famine of 1847, with all the color and dialogue of a man who lived it. (Summary by JCarson) (16 hr 22 min)

Chapters

Section 1

1:02:03

Read by James E. Carson

Section 2

1:03:47

Read by James E. Carson

Section 3

1:01:45

Read by James E. Carson

Section 4

1:01:03

Read by James E. Carson

Section 5

1:03:26

Read by James E. Carson

Section 6

59:29

Read by James E. Carson

Section 7

1:00:20

Read by James E. Carson

Section 8

1:00:56

Read by James E. Carson

Section 9

1:00:01

Read by James E. Carson

Section 10

1:00:22

Read by James E. Carson

Section 11

1:00:49

Read by James E. Carson

Section 12

1:05:32

Read by James E. Carson

Section 13

1:02:52

Read by James E. Carson

Section 14

1:00:37

Read by James E. Carson

Section 15

1:08:04

Read by James E. Carson

Section 16

51:28

Read by James E. Carson

Bewertungen

(3 Sterne)

I listened with especial interest as I was born close to the area of which Carlton writes and this recording has whetted my appetite for more of his works. A good yarn, but challenging for any reader unfamiliar with some of the Tyrone dialect and pronunciation.

(5 Sterne)

Excellently narrated and an emotional story. Very happy to have listened, thank you.

(2 Sterne)

Unbearably bleak. I could not continue... it probably deserves more stars.

Good story, but WORDY!

(3 Sterne)

This author must have been paid by the word, because aside from maybe Victor Hugo, this is the wordiest story I've encountered in a long time. He never refrains from using a dozen words, when two or three will do. The story itself is a good one; after 20-something years, the solution of an unsolved murder is slowly coming to light. Was it the kind, elderly gentleman who God seems to have stricken with calamity and who seems to be living with a heavy weight? Or was it someone else? Add to this the intrigues of the Black Prophet, the wildness yet kindness of his daughter, Sarah, the almost angelic purity and beauty of Maeve (the niece of the murdered man) who is in love with the son of the man under suspicion of the murder... it all weaves together into a rich tapestry set on the background of the harsh, cruel, unforgiving Irish Famine. The reader did well with all this verbiage, although he pronounces "gaol" and "gaoler" in the typical, incorrect American way. ;)