The City at World's End
Edmond Hamilton
Gelesen von Mark Nelson





A surprise nuclear war may cause the End of the World, but not the way anyone could have imagined. A classic science fiction tale from Galaxy Magazine. (Summary by Mark Nelson) (7 hr 6 min)
Kapitel
Chapter 01 - cataclysm | 23:56 | Gelesen von Mark Nelson |
Chapter 02 - the incredible | 17:24 | Gelesen von Mark Nelson |
Chapter 03 - dying planet | 13:40 | Gelesen von Mark Nelson |
Chapter 04 - dead city | 20:58 | Gelesen von Mark Nelson |
Chapter 05 - in the red dawn | 15:51 | Gelesen von Mark Nelson |
Chapter 06 - caravan into tomorrow | 15:20 | Gelesen von Mark Nelson |
Chapter 07 - under the dome | 22:44 | Gelesen von Mark Nelson |
Chapter 08 - Middletown calling! | 17:17 | Gelesen von Mark Nelson |
Chapter 09 - out of the silence | 19:49 | Gelesen von Mark Nelson |
Chapter 10 - from the stars | 24:57 | Gelesen von Mark Nelson |
Chapter 11 - revelation | 25:16 | Gelesen von Mark Nelson |
Chapter 12 - crisis | 28:34 | Gelesen von Mark Nelson |
Chapter 13 - embattled city | 20:05 | Gelesen von Mark Nelson |
Chapter 14 - last appeal | 20:34 | Gelesen von Mark Nelson |
Chapter 15 - mission for Earth | 19:39 | Gelesen von Mark Nelson |
Chapter 16 - on Vega | 25:19 | Gelesen von Mark Nelson |
Chapter 17 - judgment of the stars | 22:11 | Gelesen von Mark Nelson |
Chapter 18 - fatefull return | 22:29 | Gelesen von Mark Nelson |
Chapter 19 - Middletown decides | 19:59 | Gelesen von Mark Nelson |
Chapter 20 - appointment with destiny | 14:24 | Gelesen von Mark Nelson |
Chapter 21 - waking world | 15:59 | Gelesen von Mark Nelson |
Bewertungen





Sagittarius88
Satisfying read. An interesting conflict between the comfort of the tried and true and the curious eagerness to break new ground. One star less for its predictability. All the rating comments about the author having a sexist attitude are unfounded, given the time of writing and his portrayal of the strong female character in the story. On the contrary, this literary work evokes thinking of gender issues.





Pilfro
great story from one of the fathers of science fiction. obviously complainers of 1950s sexism didn't finish the story, or know the authors wife.
Great Fun !





joseph zimmerman - salcha, alaska -
Love these great sci-fi story's .. Mark always reads the Great Ones .. Thank You For Your Precious Time ...
wonderful reading of a great scifi adventure





Akku
I skimmed the reviews before starting this, some mention the scientific information being out of date and show the age of it. I'm no scientist so that meant nothing to me. what does date this story is social attitudes which have changed a bit since 1951. so I listened imaging this happened then not now, and I found that worked just fine for me. Its a great compelling tale and it's read wonderfully.
solid retro scifi





Robert A
A really enjoyable story! the plot progression is fun to follow along with and the twists and turns keep you guessing. Lots less misogynistic than many, many stories of the era- even if it's very not perfect it's got some decent female supporting characters. It's fun to hear them describe nuclear fusion before the process was well enough understood to apparently have the name we know it by today. Narration is top notch.
Saturday kids cinema





MaxoJaxo
when I was a teenager in the 80s, every Saturday morning was double feature matinee at the local one screen cinema. weekly installments of the adventures of Rocketman, a couple of Loony Toons, ice cream intermission and then a Children's Film Foundation main feature. Usually about a gang of kids foiling bank robbers, catching smugglers, hiding a space robot in the forest. This story reminds me so much of that time and those type of 'Boys Adventure' stories, a bit dated, full of tropes, a few hours on an entertaining flight of fancy, well narrated and a throwback to easier times trying to fit into different and changing times.
A gem





Tomaz Lasic
Brilliant narration by Mark Nelson and a classic that reminds why sci fi is such a wonderful way to explore the eternal themes of freedom, agency and identity. One can easily see how the latter juggernauts of Star Wars and similar have drawn on classic works like this to create their stories and universes. Highly recommend with outstanding narration to boot.
societal norms





Ernest
With all the talk of sexism, did anyone catch the interplay of authoritarians? First, the scientists tell the people that they have to leave or die. Then, they tell their rescuers that they'd rather die than leave. And why didn't Allen use the same "do you want your child to die" technique?