Reading, Short And Deep #423
Eric S. Rabkin and Jesse Willis discuss Starvation by Fredric Brown
Here’s a link to a |PDF|.
Starvation was first published in Astounding, September 1942.
Posted by Scott D. Danielson Become a Patron!
Reading, Short And Deep #423
Eric S. Rabkin and Jesse Willis discuss Starvation by Fredric Brown
Here’s a link to a |PDF|.
Starvation was first published in Astounding, September 1942.
Posted by Scott D. Danielson Become a Patron!
Pellucidar (2nd in the Pellucidar series)
By Edgar Rice Burroughs; Read by Ralph Snelson
16 Zipped MP3s or Podcast – Approx. 6 Hours [UNABRIDGED]
Publisher: LibriVox.org
Published: August 2008
Themes: / Science Fiction / Hollow Earth / Adventure / Prehistoric Beasts / Exploration / Nautical /
Pellucidar is a difficult audiobook to review because it is quite dependent on the listener being reasonably familiar with its predecessor, At the Earth’s Core. Unfortunately, the LibriVox version of At the Earth’s Core is still in its very early stages, though there is a nice looking commercial version by Tantor available.
Taking the above into account, the LibriVox Pellucidar is an enjoyable listen with plenty of adventure, a grand odyssey, new characters, and one of the coolest “dogs” (hyenadons) ever imagined. Its only flaw, a rather minor one, is its rather abrupt/summarized ending.
Pellucidar continues the adventures of David Innes, and too a lesser extent Abner Perry, in the Hollow Earth land of Pellucidar, after the surprise, cliffhanger ending of its precursor. David treks across much of Pellucidar in search of his lost love, Dian the Beautiful (It must be such a burden going through life with that epithet). Overall a fun adventure story with a few clever twists.
Ralph Snelson does a very straight, non-interpretive, reading of the story with little excess of emotion or dramatization. It is a simple, pleasant reading without bells and whistles. This is another good reading that proves the value of LibriVox’s free audiobooks.
An enjoyable audiobook, but only for those who have heard or read its predecessor (The movie would help a little, but not as much)
Posted by David Tackett