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Short Story Collection Vol. 036

Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers

(4,542 Sterne; 12 Bewertungen)

A collection of 20 short works of fiction in the public domain chosen and read by a group of LibriVox members.

The story of The Lamplighter (by Charles Dickens) is a special group reading, done by the following LV volunteers during a 2009 Librivox meeting in London, UK: Philippa, Cori Samuel, Alex Foster, Hugh McGuire, Chris Hughes and Gesine. (7 hr 35 min)

Chapters

At Twilight

31:50

Read by Shona

The Baroness

10:37

Read by Roy Schreiber

Beside Schopenhauer's Corpse

10:10

Read by Kalynda

The Box of Robbers

15:44

Read by Bethany Baldwin

Brothers

23:10

Read by Alana Jordan

How The Prince Saw America

25:44

Read by Shona

The Lamplighter

38:34

Read by LibriVox Volunteers

The Last Sixty Minutes

23:18

Read by Shona

The Loves of Alonzo Fitz Clarence and Rossanah Ethelton

39:38

Read by John Gensho Letton

The Mansion

51:29

Read by David Leeson

My Military Campaign

53:57

Read by Stuness

A Mysterious Visit

10:29

Read by Gregg Margarite (1957-2012)

The Other Man's Wife

15:36

Read by Roger Melin

Political Economy

13:57

Read by Gregg Margarite (1957-2012)

Punch, Brothers, Punch

15:13

Read by Roger Melin

The Schwartz-Metterklume Method

12:07

Read by Alan Winterrowd

Science vs. Luck

6:04

Read by Gregg Margarite (1957-2012)

Something Will Turn Up

14:33

Read by Cori Samuel

Told at the Club

12:32

Read by James Christopher

What She Wore

30:34

Read by Bellona Times

Bewertungen

"The Mansion" s story #10

(4 Sterne)

Although I am agnostic this "believer" redemption story of a calculating wealthy man in business but also investing in charity primarily for gain. The main character does not see the contradiction between his material success, donor to charity only if there is some gain for him(e.g tax write offs). He has a dream and going to the afterlife where he finds that among the many poorer accepted into heaven have large mansions for them to live in. An ethereal guide takes him to his heavenly abode and it is nothing but a pathetic shack. He is told that although he invested much money into charity, he did so selfishly. I find this 19th century allegory pertinent to today in 2013 where there is such a disparity of income, where we are regressing back to the "bad old days" of child labour, racism, poverty, shortened life span, etc of the middle, working and poor class. What is worse today is the overwhelming prevailing psychological danger of compartmentalization. The masters of this earth today are afflicted with it. One moment they will be talking about the optimism of laissez faire economic "trickle down", and charity taking the place of the public sector, etc. In the next hour the forget totally about their feelings(not actions) of compassion, and are in meetings to see how they can monopolize, kill off small mom and pops stores, and the need for a war for exploitation... The Nazis were an example of extreme compartmentalization where they could torture and kill in the death camps during their working "shift". Yet come home as if nothing happened. They have entered another compartment at home, love their wife and children, shed a tear at hearing a moving piece of music, etc. We in the USA have leaders who are sinking into this evil of compartmentalizing. I doubt that anyone in the Bush and Obama administrations has any compunction about the death and destruction they have wrought in the middle east.