Library of the World's Best Mystery and Detective Stories, Volume 3
Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers
Various
In the six volumes of the Library of the World's Best Mystery and Detective Stories, Julian Hawthorne presents us thrilling and mysterious short stories from all corners of the world. Some of the stories appeared in this collection for the first time translated into English, and many of them come from unexpected sources, such as the letters of Pliny the Younger, or a Tibetan manuscript. In the third volume, we find stories written by English and Irish authors. (Summary by Leni) (11 hr 14 min)
Chapters
Bewertungen
Various Styles All Worthy
LakotaSpeaker
The Librivox Project 'Mission' & Volunteer Readers' deserve an honorable place in literary station. Keeping the written classics in this format hopefully ensures their preservation for future generations. The Readers' in this series have various styles. While some use imitation voices, others use changing tones and inflections to make the story come 'to life' for the listener. Obviously, this is a 'talent' in which each might not be equally adept. I do recommend this series, as it is personally preferred to the other volumes in this group.
I didn't get into this book
mikezane
There was one reader who read several stories and they were unlistenable, too many mic taps. Of the stories I could listen to, the readers were very good, but the stories were blah IMHO. It seemed like the authors were trying too hard to tell a mysterious and emotional story at the same time. I found them annoying rather than entertaining. I don't think it's a bad book, just not a good one, it is just so-so.
why does the program stop after some sections. I have adjusted the "sleep" mode to give hours of play time. yet the program continues to stop and I have to press the arrow head to continue playing the next section. The program did not use to do this. it would continue to play until pressed to stop.
mostly entertaining
Gerard Kelly
the stories were mostly mildly entertaining some good readers however, one of them stuttered stumbled and lipsmacked his way through the text as if there was no punctuation. He was obviously sight reading and then began the ridiculous attempt at voice acting. Oh Dear.
Good stories if you're into it.
serrafina
If you like mystery stories, these are for you. Enjoy!
A mixed bag, but some stories are worth listening to
glttrgrl8
As in volume 1, the adjectives "mystery" and "detective" are kind of a stretch for some of these stories. The stories in the beginning and the end are pretty good, but the collection does meander off course in the middle. Probably the most disruptive thing is one reader who is very difficult to listen to because of poor audio quality, assorted mouth sounds, heavy breathing, and random long pauses midsentence. (And vocally it's considered good practice for men to not do women's voices in falsetto because it is difficult to understand and possibly painful to the ears through headphones!) Although I do appreciate the attempt to add dramatic interest by using character voices, a regular-voiced reading focusing on the content as well as clear enunciation and pronunciation, with pauses and emphasis where appropriate, is almost always better (unless, of course, you're über-talented like Mil Nicholson). However, aside from this one misguided exception, the readers are quite good overall.
A mixed bag, but some stories are worth listening to
glttrgrl8
As in volume 1, the adjectives "mystery" and "detective" are kind of a stretch for some of these stories. The stories in the beginning and the end are pretty good, but the collection does meander off course in the middle. Probably the most disruptive thing is one reader who is very difficult to listen to because of poor audio quality, assorted mouth sounds, heavy breathing, and random long pauses midsentence. (And vocally it's considered good practice for men to not do women's voices in falsetto because it is difficult to understand and possibly painful to the ears through headphones!) Although I do appreciate the attempt to add dramatic interest by using character voices, a regular-voiced reading focusing on the content as well as clear enunciation and pronunciation, with pauses and emphasis where appropriate, is almost always better (unless, of course, you're über-talented like Mil Nicholson). However, aside from this one misguided exception, the readers are quite good overall.