The Celestial Omnibus

and Other Stories

4.6

With twenty Nobel Prize nominations to his credit, E. M. Forster may reasonably be considered one of the best writers of the 20th century – perhaps of all time. He is best known for his 1924 novel A Passage to India. But almost all his writings met with rapid critical, popular and international success.

Forster’s world-view was exceptionally broad – even multi-cultural – as expressed in the humanism characterizing all his works, in the wide-ranging social criticism of Howard’s End, and in the spiritual and mystical themes for which A Passage to India is famous, and which also underlie the stories collected in The Celestial Omnibus. - Summary by Kirsten Wever

Chapitres

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Chapter 1: The Story of a Panic, Part 1 17:40 Lu par Kirsten Wever
Chapter 1: The Story of a Panic, Part 2 23:57 Lu par Kirsten Wever
Chapter 1: The Story of a Panic, Part 3 25:42 Lu par Kirsten Wever
Chapter 2: The Other Side of the Hedge 17:46 Lu par Kirsten Wever
Chapter 3: The Celestial Omnibus, Part 1 25:55 Lu par Kirsten Wever
Chapter 3: The Celestial Omnibus, Part 2 24:04 Lu par Kirsten Wever
Chapter 4: Other Kingdom, Part 1 18:31 Lu par Kirsten Wever
Chapter 4: Other Kingdom, Part 2 24:51 Lu par Kirsten Wever
Chapter 4: Other Kingdom, Part 3 29:36 Lu par Kirsten Wever
Chapter 5: The Curate's Friend 24:09 Lu par Kirsten Wever
Chapter 6: The Road from Colonus, Part 1 16:10 Lu par Kirsten Wever
Chapter 6: The Road from Colonus, Part 2 19:35 Lu par Kirsten Wever

Critiques

Great stories and read very well! Thank you :)