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The Outdoor Girls of Deepdale

Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers

(4,444 Sterne; 27 Bewertungen)

The Outdoor Girls of Deepdale was the first book in a long-running series centering around four girls: Betty Nelson, Mollie Billette, Amy Stonington, and Grace Ford. The girls go on many exciting adventures and solve mysteries. In this book the girls go on a long walking tour and in the process find a hundred dollar bill. Who owns the money and why is such a mysterious note attached? (Introduction by Elizabeth Wilcox) (4 hr 3 min)

Chapters

A Fluttering Paper

18:13

Read by Elizabeth Wilcox

The Tramping Club

18:28

Read by Elizabeth Wilcox

Jealousies

7:55

Read by Elizabeth Wilcox

A Taunt

10:32

Read by Elizabeth Wilcox

Amy's Mystery

9:24

Read by Elizabeth Wilcox

The Leaky Boat

10:34

Read by Elizabeth Wilcox

To the Rescue

7:28

Read by Elizabeth Wilcox

Closing Days

9:05

Read by Elizabeth Wilcox

Off On the Tour

6:25

Read by Elizabeth Wilcox

On the Wrong Road

13:28

Read by Elizabeth Wilcox

The Barking Dog

7:58

Read by Elizabeth Wilcox

At Aunt Sallie's

8:27

Read by Elizabeth Wilcox

The Missing Lunch

9:48

Read by Jeanie

The Broken Rail

14:51

Read by Jeanie

"It's a Bear!"

8:23

Read by Little Tee

The Deserted House

11:01

Read by Wendytoesocks

In Charge

8:17

Read by Jeanie

Relieved

6:07

Read by Natalie Paula

A Little Lost Girl

6:42

Read by Natalie Paula

The Boy Peddler

11:16

Read by Jennifer Dallman

The Letter

9:42

Read by Jennifer Dallman

A Perilous Leap

6:49

Read by Robin Cotter

The Man's Story

7:19

Read by Jennifer Dallman

By Telegraph

8:20

Read by Nassali

Back Home

6:46

Read by Jennifer Dallman

Bewertungen

(5 Sterne)

very good book. .it is a awesome book

is This a Joke?!?

(1 Sterne)

Was this book reading done as some.kond of joke? Except for one reader, Jeanne, the readers were amazingly awful. You have terrible.fakr.accents, horrible, insanely.annoying voices, readers with what MUST be fake speech impediments, as the impediments changed and came and went, readers who could not pronounce so many words properly, that one could barely understand what they were trying to read, and readers with absolutely no sense of flow or cadence. I understand these are volunteers, but there should be at least a.modicum of respect shown to the authors and their works.