The House of Baltazar


Leído por Simon Evers

(4.6 stars; 30 reviews)

Twenty years ago, John Balthazar, a notable and brilliant Cambridge mathematician, left England abruptly as he found himself falling in love with a woman who was not his wife. No one hears from him for 20 years and it's assumed he's dead. He travels to China where he steeps himself in the culture and returns incognito 20 years later with his Chinese pupil, Quong Ho. They live in a remote farmhouse where he stays in blissful ignorance of the events of the First World War until a German zeppelin crashes nearby and blows up his house. Abruptly brought back to the reality of life in 1916, Baltazar finds that his wife has long since died but has left a son (a soldier) he did not know existed, who has coincidentally met his former love in a nursing home. The second half of the book picks up the story from there. (Summary by Simon Evers) (10 hr 40 min)

Capítulos

Chapter 1 31:59 Leído por Simon Evers
Chapter 2 22:38 Leído por Simon Evers
Chapter 3 24:59 Leído por Simon Evers
Chapter 4 26:17 Leído por Simon Evers
Chapter 5 22:01 Leído por Simon Evers
Chapter 6 28:09 Leído por Simon Evers
Chapter 7 25:19 Leído por Simon Evers
Chapter 8 30:18 Leído por Simon Evers
Chapter 9 23:51 Leído por Simon Evers
Chapter 10 28:50 Leído por Simon Evers
Chapter 11 24:23 Leído por Simon Evers
Chapter 12 23:36 Leído por Simon Evers
Chapter 13 17:31 Leído por Simon Evers
Chaprer 14 28:17 Leído por Simon Evers
Chapter 15 28:37 Leído por Simon Evers
Chapter 16 19:09 Leído por Simon Evers
Chapter 17 32:55 Leído por Simon Evers
Chapter 18 36:08 Leído por Simon Evers
Chapter 19 21:20 Leído por Simon Evers
Chapter 20 23:15 Leído por Simon Evers
Chapter 21 27:43 Leído por Simon Evers
Chapter 22 23:43 Leído por Simon Evers
Chapter 23 31:35 Leído por Simon Evers
Chapter 24 16:47 Leído por Simon Evers
Chapter 25 20:52 Leído por Simon Evers

Reseñas

Excellent Reading


(5 stars)

Simon Evers rescues what is perhaps not the best WJL novel, but still captivating. Perhaps it’s the chauvinism of the times when this was written that made this story feel more like a period piece than the intellectual adventure that it wants to be. Nonetheless, thanks and gratitude for Mr. Evers and his exceptional artistic talent with the spoken word.

The House of Baltazar


(5 stars)

Locke'd best so far.