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The Joy Luck Club
- De: Amy Tan
- Narrado por: Gwendoline Yeo
- Duración: 9 h y 5 m
- Versión completa
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General
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Narración:
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Historia
For decades, a quartet of Chinese women who have emigrated to San Francisco gather to eat dim sum, play mahjong, and talk—they call themselves the Joy Luck Club. Over the years, their stories have informed the lives of four daughters who feel the weight of family and world history on their shoulders. With wit and sensitivity, this novel explores the deep, complicated, and sometimes painful connections between mothers and daughters.
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Joy Luck - abridged
- De Leslie Teicholz en 03-16-04
- The Joy Luck Club
- De: Amy Tan
- Narrado por: Gwendoline Yeo
Great story; offputting voices
Revisado: 12-21-19
I've never felt the need to review a performance before this, but now I understand what could go wrong. The reader did different voices, as many readers do, but the voices she did for the young women as told in the mothers' and other young women's stories and the men's voices were all so horrible that it totally took me out of the story. The voices she did for the men were horrible caricatures - bloated and jocky and doofus-y. The young women's voices (except in the stories told by them) were like ditzy Valley girls. It was horrible. I think she was trying to do something artistic but it just really was offputting. The voices of the actual narrators fur each section were fine, but all the other voices were so bad I'd rather she had just kept the same voice. Also, she mispronounced words. I'm not at ask talking about the parts where she was doing a Chinese accent. She mispronounced words spoken by the native English speakers, like "gra-night" instead of "gra-nit" for "granite".
Of course, the story itself is a masterpiece.
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The Joy Luck Club
- De: Amy Tan
- Narrado por: Gwendoline Yeo
- Duración: 9 h y 5 m
- Versión completa
-
General
-
Narración:
-
Historia
Four Chinese women, drawn together by the shadow of their past, meet in San Francisco to play mah jong, invest in stocks, eat dim sum, and to "say" stories to each other. Nearly 40 years later, one of the women has died, and her daughter arrives to take her place. However, the daughter never expected to learn of her mother's secret lifelong wish - and the tragic way in which it has come true. The revelation creates among the women an urgent need to remember the past.
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Joy Luck - abridged
- De Leslie Teicholz en 03-16-04
- The Joy Luck Club
- De: Amy Tan
- Narrado por: Gwendoline Yeo
Great story; offputting voices
Revisado: 12-21-19
I've never felt the need to review a performance before this, but now I understand what could go wrong. The reader did different voices, as many readers do, but the voices she did for the young women as told in the mothers' and other young women's stories and the men's voices were all so horrible that it totally took me out of the story. The voices she did for the men were horrible caricatures - bloated and jocky and doofus-y. The young women's voices (except in the stories told by them) were like ditzy Valley girls. It was horrible. I think she was trying to do something artistic but it just really was offputting. The voices of the actual narrators fur each section were fine, but all the other voices were so bad I'd rather she had just kept the same voice. Also, she mispronounced words. I'm not at ask talking about the parts where she was doing a Chinese accent. She mispronounced words spoken by the native English speakers, like "gra-night" instead of "gra-nit" for "granite".
Of course, the story itself is a masterpiece.
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Self-Reliance
- De: Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Narrado por: Jim Killavey
- Duración: 1 h y 13 m
- Versión completa
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General
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Narración:
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Historia
Ralph Waldo Emerson was an American philosopher, lecturer, essayist, and poet, who is best remembered for leading the Transcendentalist movement of the mid-19th century. He was a a champion of individualism and wrote dozens of essays. Most criics consider "Self-Reliance" his best. It has the most thorough statement of one of Emerson's repeating themes, the need for each individual to avoid conformity and false consistency.
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Wonderful
- De cindilla en 12-15-12
- Self-Reliance
- De: Ralph Waldo Emerson
- Narrado por: Jim Killavey
Narrator didn't pronounce his Rs
Revisado: 09-28-16
I guess it's realistic because Emerson was a Bostonian, but it was really annoying that he said, for example, propahty instead of property. Really. It got annoying and hard to understand at times.
Text is obviously a classic of American literary thought.
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