The Pony Rider Boys in the Alkali
Frank Gee Patchin
Gelesen von LibriVox Volunteers





Yee-Haww! The Pony Rider Boys are on the move again! This time the boys are in the desert of Nevada, discovering the beauty and perils in 100 degree heat. It should be another thrilling ride that Professor Zepplin has taken them on! (Summary by Ann Boulais )
Previous book in the series: The Pony Rider Boys in the Ozarks
Next book in the series: The Pony Rider Boys in New Mexico (5 hr 10 min)
Kapitel
01 - The Desert's Mystic Spell | 18:42 | Gelesen von Richard Kilmer (1942-2022) |
02 - The First Night in Camp | 20:44 | Gelesen von Richard Kilmer (1942-2022) |
03 - Twisted by a Twister | 16:17 | Gelesen von Richard Kilmer (1942-2022) |
04 - The Charge of the Light Brigade | 14:39 | Gelesen von Richard Kilmer (1942-2022) |
05 - Stalking Big Game by Moonlight | 13:12 | Gelesen von Richard Kilmer (1942-2022) |
06 - Bagged by Lucky Shots | 8:13 | Gelesen von Kenneth Sergeant Gaghan |
07 - Chunky Comes to Grief | 11:29 | Gelesen von Mark Mickelson |
08 - Nearly Drowned in an Alkali Sink | 14:57 | Gelesen von Mark Mickelson |
09 - The Boys Discover a River | 9:17 | Gelesen von Kenneth Sergeant Gaghan |
10 - A Cowboy Takes a Header | 9:18 | Gelesen von Mark Mickelson |
11 - A Piece of Human Sandpaper | 10:50 | Gelesen von Mark Mickelson |
12 - Running Down the Trail | 14:18 | Gelesen von Kenneth Sergeant Gaghan |
13 - Coyotes Join in the Chorus | 10:32 | Gelesen von Mark Mickelson |
14 - Fun in the Foothills | 12:08 | Gelesen von Mark Mickelson |
15 - Bud Promises Some Excitement | 8:12 | Gelesen von Steve Mattingly |
16 - The Battle of the Stallions | 13:35 | Gelesen von Steve Mattingly |
17 - On a Wild-Horse Hunt | 17:24 | Gelesen von Bill Mosley |
18 - Roped by Rough Riders | 16:09 | Gelesen von Bill Mosley |
19 - Winning Their Reward | 9:46 | Gelesen von Arnie Horton |
20 - Visited by a Halo | 15:20 | Gelesen von Marty |
21 - Off on a Dry Trail | 8:52 | Gelesen von Marty |
22 - In the Hermit's Cave | 12:44 | Gelesen von Marty |
23 - Lost in the Desert Maze | 8:01 | Gelesen von Marty |
24 - Conclusion | 15:44 | Gelesen von Marty |
Bewertungen
I really enjoyed this story...





mikezane
... and I am off to find the rest of the stories in the series. This is a western-style story of a group of young boys who have plenty of cowboy adventures while crossing the desert. They manage to capture some wonderful wild stallions, they give a couple of tough, older cowboys a bit of a licking, all while keep their sense of humor and camaraderie. Regarding the readers - I happen to like RK's reading style. He is easy to follow and has a nice steady cadence. Quality of sound recordings is excellent. The rest of the readers likewise do a very nice job with voices and quality of recordings. All in all, I found the story to be very enjoyable.
I don't think you understand LibriVox at all





librivoxbooks
The previous reviewer has no understanding whatsoever of how LibriVox works. There are no managers. We are ALL volunteers. Readers choose what they would like to record. There is no allocation. If you don't like a particular reader, don't listen. Many people do like a plain vanilla reading - you don't, so choose to listen to what you DO like.
it's a good story but way too many readers,.





AZRooster1981





A LibriVox Listener
As always I really enjoy the readers and all their hard work. Thoroughly enjoyable!





Jonathan
I really like this Story. Also the Readers are very Good
265 the kids to the bank today





A LibriVox Listener
265 the first time





Brett Miller
nice to see Chunky saving Thad for a change.
pathetic reading





GonzoRanch
Who is the idiot that keeps giving Kilmer the high action books?? How long will this go on??? I'll read a books description that sounds so exciting but then I see Kilmer is the reader & it's like, "Oh crap. Forget it." It's like the book is a high performance car, so you expect a good ride, but the reader is just like water has been poored into the gas tank. Kilmer must be some kind of manager in Librovox - how else do you explain high action books CONSISTENTLY being given to possibly the most dull & boring of readers?? PLEASE, get off it!!