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Maggie: A Girl of the Streets

Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers

(3,778 Sterne; 27 Bewertungen)

Stephen Crane's first novel, Maggie: A Girl of the Streets has been called "the first dark flower of American Naturalism" for its distinctive elements of naturalistic fiction. The chief character, Maggie, descends into prostitution after being led astray by her lover. Rather than focusing on those that make up the very rich or middle class, the novel highlights the deplorable living conditions of the working class during the so-called Gilded Age in New York's Bowery. (Summary adapted from Wikipedia by Illiterati) (2 hr 46 min)

Chapters

Chapter 1

9:55

Read by Lucy Burgoyne (1950 - 2014)

Chapter 2

12:00

Read by Lucy Burgoyne (1950 - 2014)

Chapter 3

8:37

Read by Zloot

Chapter 4

9:54

Read by ernieBob

Chapter 5

8:09

Read by jschwend

Chapter 6

7:36

Read by TriciaG

Chapter 7

9:37

Read by B. G. Oxford

Chapter 8

9:26

Read by swade

Chapter 9

9:16

Read by Allyson Hester

Chapter 10

7:31

Read by TriciaG

Chapter 11

12:28

Read by TriciaG

Chapter 12

5:02

Read by V.D. Steppan

Chapter 13

7:24

Read by Alana Jordan

Chapter 14

13:10

Read by daisy55

Chapter 15

7:26

Read by daisy55

Chapter 16

7:09

Read by Zloot

Chapter 17

7:25

Read by Zloot

Chapter 18

8:45

Read by Zloot

Chapter 19

5:32

Read by Philippa

Bewertungen

"Rather than focusing on those

(4 Sterne)

that make up the very rich or middle class, the novel highlights the deplorable living conditions of the working class during the so-called Gilded Age in New York's Bowery" As it always has been, it is wealth disparity that creates poverty and all the social and personal ills that go with it

wonderful well written story. magic with Steven Crane’s writing

(5 Sterne)

Steven Crane weaves magic with this wonderful descriptive story. The dialect of the streets is magnificent and all of the readers were energetic and added so much to the story. Loved the book.

Crane's Maggie

(4 Sterne)

Great author, terrible story! Crane is a fabulous auther, but the subject matter is sad and the characters desperately lost.