Audiobook
Twenty short nonfiction works, individually chosen by the readers. "The ground rose and fell in successive furrows, like the ruffled waters of a lake, and I became bewildered in my ideas..." John James Audubon's vivid recollection of the 1812 New Madrid earthquake is one of several Vol. 072 selections with a scientific focus. Others include Luminous Plants; The Sunbeam and the Spectrascope; and biographies of two shipbuilders: Robert Fulton and Thomas Andrews. The emotive and rational sides of human nature are evinced in essays (The Game of Scandal; Bashful; Child Psychology and Nonsense); treatises (Theory and Practice in Government Reform; Plagiarizing Aristotle); and the records of two very different murder trials: John Kimber (1792); and James Sullivan (1851). Travel to foreign lands; their history and arts are well represented: Rambles About Rome (1907); The Mosaics of Ravenna, Italy; Travellers Before the Christian Era; Northern Europe to the Beginning of the Fourteenth Century. Literary and artistic concerns round out Vol. 072, with newspaper accounts of Oscar Wilde's visits to the U.S.; William Faulkner reminiscing about his youthful discovery of literature; and artist and teacher Arthur Guptill explaining how to render pencil sketches from photographs. Summary by Sue Anderson
| # | Chapter Name | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 4:12 | |
| 2 | 7:29 | |
| 3 | 7:23 | |
| 4 | 26:11 | |
| 5 | 9:30 | |
| 6 | 6:47 | |
| 7 | 23:50 | |
| 8 | 26:58 | |
| 9 | 44:06 | |
| 10 | 12:42 | |
| 11 | 19:52 | |
| 12 | 12:20 | |
| 13 | 5:41 | |
| 14 | 27:55 | |
| 15 | 31:42 | |
| 16 | 34:23 | |
| 17 | 31:46 | |
| 18 | 38:21 | |
| 19 | 8:03 | |
| 20 | 7:47 |
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