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The Great Hunger
- Ireland 1845-1849
- Narrated by: Frederick Davidson
- Length: 18 hrs and 22 mins
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Publisher's summary
The Great Hunger is the story of one of the worst disasters in world history: the Irish Potato Famine of the 1840s. Within five years, one million people died of starvation. Emigrants by the hundreds of thousands sailed for America and Canada in small, ill-equipped, dangerously unsanitary ships. Some ships never arrived; those that did carried passengers already infected with and often dying of typhus.
The Irish who managed to reach the United States alive had little or no money and were often too weak to work. They crowded into dirty cellars, begged, and took whatever employment they could get. Epidemics, riots, and chaos followed in their wake.
The Great Hunger is a heartbreaking story of suffering, insensitivity, and blundering stupidity; yet it is also an epic tale of courage, dignity, and - despite all odds - a hardly supportable optimism.
Cecil Blanche Woodham-Smith (1896-1977) was a British historian and biographer. She wrote four popular history books, each dealing with a different aspect of the Victorian era.
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What listeners say about The Great Hunger
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Michael
- 10-02-13
Historically interesting; audibly painful
Who would you have cast as narrator instead of Frederick Davidson?
Literally ANYONE who does NOT have a British accent.
Any additional comments?
The story itself is fine, perhaps even better than that as it offers an interesting look back at a oft-forgotten episode that has gone on to play a major role in shaping the world we live in -- particularly those of us living in the United States (especially those of us with Irish ancestors). Also, let me preface my review by saying that I think Frederick Davidson (aka David Chase) is a fine reader, and think he has done great work with books such as "The Brothers Karamazov".
However, having to listen to this book read in English accent makes it **this close** to impossible to enjoy for anybody who goes in knowing a little bit about what went on. I don't mean to imply that England/Britain is solely, or even primarily, at fault for the Potato Famine. As the story rightly explains, blame can be shared on both sides of the Irish Sea, including plenty to be shared by the Irish themselves (some of them anyway). That being said, the English/British government clearly played an instrumental role in allowing the situation to spiral out of control and become the humanitarian disaster it turned out to be. Thus, the decision to have it read in Frederick Davidson's (aka David Chase) prim and proper English accent struck me as both perplexing and, to be perfectly honest, slightly distasteful. Granted, the only thing about me that is truly is Irish is my last name and, yes, my dad was born and raised in the US-of-A (as was his father and father's father). Yet I STILL felt slightly insulted having to listen to this by Davidson.
Conclusion: the story is interesting and, so long as you weren't indoctrinated by pro-Irish, anti-British propaganda as a youth, you may find Davidson's performance perfectly adequate. But don't say you weren't at least warned...
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- dobby
- 10-03-22
the great hunger
I had always knew of England's shameful treatment of the Irish but this book goes into the details of the laws pass and indecent treatment of a people that nearly resulted in genocide. Very depressing.
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- mortan
- 02-27-22
exce packed with info that i never new.
this book explained a lot to me with times dates and names and why people did to help
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- Hal
- 07-02-24
Policies that turned disaster into a humanitarian crisis.
This book has eye opening history on the misery of the Irish and it examines the policies the British used on the Irish.
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- Lucian of Samosata
- 03-06-15
Good book but the English reader is horrible
Would you recommend this audiobook to a friend? If so, why?
The book is somewhat old (1962) but was for years the standard book on the Great Irish Famine. There are probably more up-to-date books out there now but I'm not sure of their availability on audiobook. It is a solid introduction to one of the great tragedies of the 19th Century.
How could the performance have been better?
If I had previewed the audio before purchasing, I would not have bought this. The reader has such an insufferable, upper-crust British accent, that it is almost a comical parody of British accents. For someone in America or Canada especially, this is very hard to listen to for any extended period of time.
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2 people found this helpful
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- Reilly
- 03-30-21
The accent of the narrator is intolerable
It makes it difficult to concentrate on the content itself. An Irish reader would be more appropriate.
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- Steph
- 04-11-21
I was really turned off by the narrator...at first
I thought it very absurd that a brit with an upper crust accent should read this book. But when you get to the heart of this book, it's really about all that was done and not done by the great Lords of England. Nothing sounds better than to hear the abominable things written about the Irish in the most detached sophisticated way possible.
Having said that, this book was hard for me to finish. I've read a lot about horrible historical acts but this one really hurt to read. The suffering is unbearable to imagine. If only the camera was in use at this time, the haughty, self centered, perfectly correct British Government would never gotten away with this. Unbelievable.
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3 people found this helpful
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- Aaron
- 11-03-11
The Authoratative Account, but that Narrator...
"The Great Hunger" is a masterpiece account of the Potato Blight and, in particular, of the British Government's response to it. Woodham-Smith uses a massive amount of primary sources to convey not only what actions the government took (and didn't take), but the author takes us into the inner thoughts of the key players - Robert Peel, John Russell, Charles Wood, Charles Trevelyan, Lord Clarendon - to understand why they made the decisions they made. The book concludes with a thoroughly damning appraisal of the performance of the British government, and particularly of the Russell Parliament's utter incompetence and inability to foresee the likely consequence of any one of its actions. Too, the landlord class in Ireland come off largely as callous barbarians who wrecked the country and themselves through shortsighted selfishness. For all the outrage, Woodham-Smith's tone is remarkably fair and restrained, and in almost all cases, the guilty are condemned by their own words.
My only gripe with this audiobook is the narrator, whose elegantly stuffy English accent and tone (straight out of the House of Lords) is hard to bear in a book that catalogues the sins of Britain against another people. His chronic mispronunciation of Irish names (ex. he pronounces Drogheda as "Dro-GEE-duh", and Thomas Francis Meagher's name is read "MEE-ger") is particularly annoying. Otherwise, the narration itself is competent.
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16 people found this helpful
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- Brendan
- 05-07-24
Honest assessment
I have already read this once as a young person. There is so much information I could read/listen to this again and again. Very honest account of the mistakes and causes of this horrific event of Irish history. The narrator was good, well spoken, although it took a little to get through his very haughty English accent. The thing that irritated me the most was his complete inability to properly pronounce Irish place names. It was so off that there were a couple towns which I truly could not decipher due to his atrocious pronunciation. There were others that were obvious because he was saying them phonetically like Achill. But honestly if you are going to read a ten hour book about Ireland, for the love of all that is good and holy could you ASK SOMEONE how the words are pronounced? I mean truly it was quite annoying.
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- kenneth goodrich
- 04-05-21
Pathetic.
There is no redeeming guality for this book. Get a medical encyclopedia and read about typhus and save hours of your time.
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