Classic Love Stories, Katherine Mansfield
Classic Love Stories, Katherine Mansfield
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Classic Love Stories
Volume One

Author: Katherine Mansfield, Louisa May Alcott, Thomas Hardy

Narrator: Martin Jarvis, Rosalind Ayres

Unabridged: 3 hr 23 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: CSA Word

Published: 09/08/2005


Synopsis

LISTINGS: The Sphinx Without a Secret by Oscar Wilde. Mr & Mrs Dove by Katherine Mansfield. Angela by W.S. Gilbert. Perilous Play by Louisa May Alcott. The Singing Lesson by Katherine Mansfield. The Melancholy Hussar of the German Legion by Thomas Hardy. Genefer by Sabine Baring-Gould. The Bagman's Story - from The Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens.

This wide-ranging collection around the theme of love is read by husband and wife, Martin Jarvis and Rosalind Ayres. These are not love stories full of sentimentality, but a full range of clever, poignant, sometimes funny and often romantic stories set in an age of chivalry and honour. Enjoy aspects of humour and respect in "Mr. & Mrs. Dove", love from afar in the poignant tale, "Angela", and a woman clouded in mystery in "The Sphinx Without a Secret". Then find love laced with comedy from an inebriated Tom Smart talking to the furniture in Dickens' "The Bagman's Story", and tragedy from Phyllis and her love for a German Hussar. Meet the parents of Joe who want him to marry the wealthy Polly instead of his choice, "Genefer", and the strange effect of drugs when two young people fall in love under the influence of hashish in a little known, but ahead of its time, story entitled "Perilous Play".

About Louisa May Alcott

Louisa May Alcott was born in Pennsylvania in 1832. Like the character of Jo March in Little Women, young Louisa didn't conform to the restrictions placed on girls of the period: 'No boy could be my friend till I had beaten him in a race,' she claimed, 'and no girl if she refused to climb trees, leap fences.' And, also like Jo, she was highly imaginative and writing was an early passion.As her family was often in financial difficulty, Louisa worked from a young age to support her family, taking any position available: a governess, domestic servant, seamstress and teacher were among her jobs. She also wrote poetry and short stories for popular magazines, and melodramatic novels under a pseudonym. When the American Civil War began, Louisa, who fervently opposed slavery, lamented that women weren't able to fight, and volunteered as a nurse at the Union Hospital in Georgetown, Washington. Her nursing career was brief as she contracted typhoid, but she wrote Hospital Sketches, a truthful and poignant account based on letters she wrote home to her family in Concord, and it was published to great acclaim.In 1868 Louisa was asked by her publisher to write 'a girls' story'. This resulted in Little Women, which is largely based on the experiences of the author and her three sisters. It was a phenomenal success. In a time when children's books were morality tales featuring idealised, two-dimensional protagonists, Little Women was revolutionary, peopled as it was by relatable, flawed, fully realised characters. Its success guaranteed financial stability for Louisa, who continued the March family's story in Good Wives, Little Men and Jo's Boys. Louisa never married, concluding that 'liberty is a better husband than love.' She died in 1888 and is buried in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in Concord.


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