
Joseph Andrews
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Narrado por:
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John Telfer
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De:
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Henry Fielding
In one of the first novels in the English language, we follow the picaresque adventures of Joseph Andrews, a virtuous young man who is keen to maintain his innocence despite being coerced by nearly every woman he encounters.
The episodic journey sees him travel home to London with his tutor, Parson Adams, as he heads to find his sweetheart, Fanny. Much mayhem ensues along the way as they become embroiled in a series of escapades and slapstick brawls.
Fielding is an expert satirist, and through the many twists and turns of narration he combines high and low literature and high and low humor to create a wittily funny novel that he aptly named a "comic epic poem in prose".
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Similarly, when ideas make an appearance they are handled just as directly; either with a prefatory essay-chapter for each new book of the story, or in set-piece debates among the characters. It’s not a better way of telling a tale, but it can seem, at least to this listener, a refreshingly honest, no-nonsense way to go about it.
Hence my utter enjoyment of Joseph Andrews. Fielding assumes you already know what an upper- or lower-class home would look like. His characters don't personify ideas; they're mouthpieces for them. Add the author’s sincere humanity (far less cloying than Dickens) and his humor that can be aimed at anyone, including his heroes and heroines, and you have a thoroughly enjoyable listen. Though I’ve always (probably mistakenly) considered this novel a warm-up for Fielding’s tour de force, Tom Jones, it stands on its own, even if one has never read Richardson’s Pamela (which I have not).
John Telfer, whom I’ve only recently encountered in his recordings of Leslie Charteris’ Simon Templar adventures, does a bang-up job here, reading with what another reviewer has called, “just the right tone”. He gets every urbane nuance and off-color innuendo and expresses each to a nicety.
Action and Ideas
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Lve doesn't run smoothly but it's worth the wait
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As expected good narrator
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A peek into English life in the 1740s 
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A delight
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I love this book. We do not wear nightcaps, but we have the same follies as characters in this book. Published in 1742, it is about us. The reader is excellent.A perfect book and an excellent reader
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The meandering story is not the point…
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1001 Books
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