Toggle navigation
LibriVox Audio Books
Top
New
Genres
Authors
Android
iPhone
Search Results
The Raven
Read by Chris Goringe
Edgar Allan Poe
Perhaps Edgar Allen Poe's most famous poem, the "Raven" is a macabre exploration of a man, his memories of Lenore, and the black b…
The Glugs of Gosh
Read by Chris Goringe
C. J. Dennis
First published in 1917, The Glugs of Gosh satirizes Australian life at the start of the twentieth century - but the absurdities it catalogs…
Version 2
In
Danse Russe
Read by Chris Goringe
William Carlos Williams
Williams spent his life as a doctor practicing pediatric medicine in northern New Jersey, a few miles west of New York City. During the work…
Clever Elsie
In
Grimms' Fairy Tales
Read by Chris Goringe
Jacob & Wilhelm Grimm
and
Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm
A classic collection of oral German folklore, brought together for posterity by the scholarly brothers Grimm in the 1800s, this epitome of f…
Version 4
In
I Do Not Love Thee
Read by Chris Goringe
norton_c
and
Caroline Elizabeth Sarah Norton
LibriVox volunteers bring you twenty different readings of Caroline Elizabeth Sarah Norton’s I Do Not Love Thee, a weekly poetry project. (S…
The War of the Worlds - Book 1 - Chapter 02
In
The War of the Worlds
Read by Chris Goringe
H. G. Wells
H. G. Wells wrote The War of the Worlds in 1898, when there was much speculation about life on the planet Mars. The book is considered to be…
Chapter 14
In
The Mystery (LibriVox NaNoWriMo novel 2006)
Read by Chris Goringe
Written by Chris Goringe, recorded by Chris Goringe
and
Librivox Volunteers
The idea was to write a whole novel in the month of November, based on the guidelines of the National Novel Writing Month. The twist is that…
Section 6
In
An International Episode
Read by Chris Goringe
Henry James
Two men visiting the US from London meet a pair of charming women who return the visit the following year in London. Romantic intrigues, mis…
Chapters 12-13
In
Pride and Prejudice
Read by Chris Goringe
Jane Austen
Pride and Prejudice is the most famous of Jane Austen’s novels, and its opening is one of the most famous lines in English literature - “It …