Revolution, and other Essays


Lu par LibriVox Volunteers

(4.8 étoiles; 15 critiques)

A collection of 13 essays written between 1900 and 1908, published in 1910. The lead essay, "Revolution", outlines how and why London renounced capitalism as a failed social system and declared himself an active participant in the "socialist revolution", the last essay is an autobiographical piece, and the essays in between are on diverse subjects. A few of the “essays” are actually humorous short fiction stories; others are serious, sometimes angry rants against capitalistic greed and political corruption. All of the pieces are thought-provoking and excellently written, though only loosely intellectual, highly opinionated, and rife with contradiction, as was London himself. -- Summary by Michele Fry (6 hr 7 min)

Chapitres

Revolution 49:59 Lu par Michele Fry
The Somnambulists 15:42 Lu par Ignare
The Dignity of Dollars 16:18 Lu par Ignare
Goliah, Part I 25:07 Lu par Jeremy Robertson
Goliah, Part II 23:08 Lu par Jeremy Robertson
The Golden Poppy 21:56 Lu par KHand
The Shrinkage of the Planet 27:28 Lu par Steve C
The House Beautiful 29:54 Lu par Lucretia B.
The Gold Hunters of the North 29:55 Lu par Phil Schempf
Fomá Gordyéeff 11:44 Lu par Ignare
These Bones shall Rise Again 21:05 Lu par Greg Giordano
The Other Animals 46:06 Lu par DJRickyV
The Yellow Peril 26:07 Lu par Sean Grabosky
What Life Means to Me 22:56 Lu par Michele Fry

Critiques

interesting stuff


(5 étoiles)

I never knew he wrote shorts like these. Interesting to see a different side of him other than the adventure stories he is so well known for. Also, the readers all did great jobs.