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The Diary of Samuel Pepys: Volume I: 1660 - 1663
- Narrated by: Leighton Pugh, David Timson
- Length: 42 hrs and 43 mins
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Publisher's summary
The Diary of Samuel Pepys is one of the most entertaining documents in English history. Written between 1660 and 1669, as Pepys was establishing himself as a key administrator in the naval office, it is an intimate portrait of life in 17th-century England covering his professional and personal activities, including, famously, his love of music, theatre, food, wine and his peccadilloes. This Naxos AudioBooks production is the world premiere recording of the diary in its entirety; the result of many years of scholarship by Robert Latham (Magdalene College, Cambridge) and William Matthews (University of California). It has been divided into three volumes. Volume I covers the opening years of the Restoration and introduces us to many of the key characters - family, government and royalty. Pepys was there when Charles II returned to England, and he lived through those opening years of the Stuart monarchy, with its revenge on the regicides. He also recorded the reopening of theaters, and how he relaxed from the Puritan way of life.
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The most influential work of the entire Spanish literary canon and a founding work of modern Western literature, Don Quixote is also one of the greatest works ever written. Hugely entertaining but also moving at times, this episodic novel is built on the fantasy life of one Alonso Quixano, who lives with his niece and housekeeper in La Mancha. Quixano, obsessed by tales of knight errantry, renames himself ‘Don Quixote’ and with his faithful servant Sancho Panza, goes on a series of quests.
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More than funny
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What listeners say about The Diary of Samuel Pepys: Volume I: 1660 - 1663
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Dog_Quixote
- 04-07-24
Judged for what it is, it's fantastic.
Ever read something from the distant past and wondered, 'did people really think and talk like that?' Mostly that seems very unlikely. Mostly people before the 19th century seem not to have interior lives as we would know them today. But here you have it; and, in the freaking 17th century. Yes, there's tedium. Yes, he says little about the most interesting things. But 42 hours of it (and that's just volume 1)? The very staccato of anodyne events creates a verisimilitude that you rarely get in any other form. More than that, it's a testimony to certain aspects of a universal human nature. He's petty and noble; obsessed and generous, unhinged and level headed. He's telling you about it and often without a lot of self awareness. That lack of artifice is illuminating. Because it is such a unedited testimony, you get all the stuff that anybody in any age would only reluctantly reveal. Shakespeare has only been dead for about 50 years. "The colonies" are still iffy propositions. The "enlightenment' is still off in the distance. To top it off, Pepys witnesses momentous events. He knows and speaks to what are to us historical figures. This is perspective on the distant past in a way that's really hard to find.
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2 people found this helpful
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- Scrushy
- 07-28-17
Oh So Long
Any additional comments?
I thought I was being clever, wanting to listen to his diary in its entirety. I thought, "who are those wimps who read little short exceprts? I'm going to learn what it was really like to live then!" I think I made it through about 15 hours. Part 1 (of 4) alone is 35 hours long. Ugh. I can tell you with utmost certainty, that Mr. Pepys had a busy and interesting life, but the repetitive lists were too long for me.
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3 people found this helpful
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- David C.
- 03-26-15
Riveting
Excellently performed by Leighton Pugh. Incredibly interesting to step into 1660s England. It's amazing how much has stayed the same.
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14 people found this helpful
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- murray
- 03-22-17
can't get enough of this guy
love it. he's a real human being like me no more than me because he writes it all down and is curious and cynical and naive and love the guy from 350 years ago
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- Amazon Customer
- 09-18-18
Tremendous Piece of History, Beautifully Narrated
As a lover of history, this audiobook has provided me with hours upon hours of enjoyment. It is the only full, uncut, and uncensored audio version of the diary and is an incredible insight into life in 17th Century Britain. Of course I have no need to go in to the wonders of the diary itself - most of you are here because you already know that Samuel Pepys maintained undoubtedly the most detailed and forthcoming diary of his era. The narration of the diary itself is masterful and gives you the sensation that Samuel himself is speaking to you. The narrator winds emotion into his speech to beautifully convey the tone of the text. What more is there to say about this audiobook other than I've already bought the second and third volumes.
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- Sandra L.
- 11-14-20
Excellent narration
I've been very impressed with the narrator's handling of the material. He makes what could have been a very dry listen come alive and gives Pepys an engaging personality (that is difficult for the listener to separate from the historical person).
This is actually a problem for me. I bought these books because I thought they'd be easy to fall asleep to. Instead, they tend to keep me awake!
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- Darwin8u
- 11-06-15
"Mens cuiusque is est quisque“ or "Mind is the Man”
Volume 1 of the Naxos Audiobook Version of 'Diary of Samuel Pepys contains the first four books/years of his diary:
1660 - Book 1:
The first book (1660, with 117000 words) and first year of Samuel Pepy's famous diary. There are so many things about this book to love. As a survey of the time and place it is amazing, as a history of the English Restoration it is fascinating, as a social commentary it is priceless. Pepys' honesty and transparency (it was written in a short-hand code that took 165 years to decipher, so...) is incredible. He writes about his dalliances, worries, money, health, religion, music, the arts, sex, drinking, shit, and family with an openness that is incredibly interesting. It was informal, but detailed with so many revelations that sometimes while reading I felt like I was invading a private space, a voyeur in another's life.
The arc of the 1st volume is the return of Charles II to England and the rise of Pepys' patron Edward Montagu, 1st Earl of Sandwich. Pepys buys a new home, sees his finances improve as he rises as Lord Mountagu's secretary and is given the position of Clerk of the Acts.
1661 - Book 2:
The second book (1661, with 84,000 words) is an interesting year for Samuel. King Charles II was crowned at Westminster Abbey on 23 April 1661. Admiral Sir Edward Montagu (aka Lord Sandwich) is gone shortly after on a mission for the King as Ambassador to Portugal and to retrieve Catherine of Braganza, from Lisbon to England, to be the new Queen. Pepys keeps busy with work and family. He sees his personal fortune grow, but worries that his eating, drinking, and time at the theatre is reducing his money. He also worries that due to some complication with his uncles will, their family will not inherit as much as they should. His mother is starting to mentally become more simple and argumentative (dementia) causing troubles for Sam's father. More and more people are getting sick and some good friends and family of Samuel have died. I keep on having to remind myself that he is only 28.
1662 - Book 3:
The third book (1662, with 105,000 words) shows that 1662 has been a pretty good year for Pepys. He is rising in the esteem of both the Duke of York and Lord Sandwich. He is constantly working to better himself at his job and knowledge. He has hustle and is innovative. This year he has taken an oath to only dream two cups of wine a day and limit his times at the theatre and it appears to be helping him be more productive. His major stresses are his Uncle's estate and the lawsuit involved with it, his brother Tom's need for a wife with sufficient money, his wife and maid Sarah's constant fighting, the politics at work with Sir William Pen and Sir J. Mennes, two coworkers who he is in disputes with about their co-lodgings. He is learning like Epicetus' rule says, "Some things are in our power; others are not".
1663 - Book 4:
The fourth book, and final year in the first audio volume, (1663, 159,000 words) will be remembered by me as the year Sam Pepys really struggled with farts, finance, fidelity, and family. I would say I digress, but no, really. Those were big things for Sam in 1663. Seriously, one of the greatest 10 pages of literature devoted to a man's flatulence and stool MUST be Oct 5 - 13, 1663 in Samuel Pepys diary.
I might have only given the first volume 4 four stars, but Sam EARNED that last star this last year. Pushed it right out he did. Also, there was a pretty good go Sam had with Mrs. Lane on July 18: "By and by Mrs. Lane comes; and my bands not being done, she and I parted and met at the Crowne in the palace-yard, where we eat (a chicken I sent for) and drank and were mighty merry, and I had my full liberty of tossing her and doing what I would but the last thing of all; for I felt as much as I would and made her feel my thing also, and put the end of it to her breast and by and by to her very belly -- of which I am heartily ashamed. But I do resolve never to do more so."
Nobody believes you Sam, you dog.
So, my review is finished, and so to bed.
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42 people found this helpful
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- Anonymous User
- 08-04-23
Fantastic performance.
Having read much of Pepys in the past, the reader of this series really brings the diary to life.
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- Barbara Kindle Customer
- 09-18-15
Life in a Perilous Time
I truly did not expect to enjoy this as much as I did. I bought it because it is something I've heard about since school and expected it to be very dry. Anything but.
It is one thing to read history and know that during the late 1600s that people had to deal with things like small pox, minor infections which could result in death and just saying the wrong word could result in jail, or execution. And the wrong word especially in Pepys time and place changed from month to month. He lived and worked while Cromwell's puritan regime folded with his death, and was literally an eye witness to Charles II coming to England.
But oddly it is the everyday things that are so interesting. Of course he records things from his own personal view. We hear about his wife burning her hand, "the girl" refusing to kill birds for dinner. She just will not kill anything, his wife had to do it. Wow, I thought in the time before refrigeration that people did what they had to do. I couldn't kill anything either, so it is amazing to look back across the centuries and see a kindred spirit, however small and unnamed the spirit is.
The narrators are clear, pleasant, and cheerful. It is easy to feel that Samuel himself is just chatting aloud. I am glad to get a small "peep" into such a distant world.
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- valia
- 05-28-15
Life
He was just committed to committing adultery so attending church never brought him to repentance. It's a good read but not if you are a real Christian willing to truly becoming and being Christ's disciple. His poor wife...
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