

Austen, Jane – Persuasion – Free iTunes – Free MP3.Austen, Jane – Northanger Abbey – Free iTunes – Free MP3.Austen, Jane – Mansfield Park – Free iTunes – Free MP3 Stream.

Austen, Jane – Love and Friendship – Free Zip File – Free MP3 Stream.Austen, Jane – Lady Susan – Free iTunes – Free MP3 – Free Zip File.Austen, Jane – Emma – Free iTunes – Free MP3.Atwood, Margaret – “Stone Mattress” – Free Stream.Asimov, Isaac – Short Story Collection – Free Download (Zip File) – Free Stream.Asimov, Isaac – “The Last Question” (readings by Leonard Nimoy) – Free YouTube Audio.Asimov, Isaac – Radio Dramas of The Foundation Trilogy & 7 Classic Stories – Free Stream.Asimov, Isaac – “Nightfall” – Free Stream.Aristophanes – Lysistrata (performed by Lucy Lawless) – Free Stream.Aristophanes – Lysistrata – Free iTunes – Free MP3 Zip File.Anderson, Sherwood – Winesburg, Ohio – Free iTunes – Free MP3.Aesop – Aesop’s Fables – Free iTunes – Free MP3.Also please see our related collection: The 150 Best Podcasts to Enrich Your Mind. Below, you’ll find great works of fiction, poetry and non-fiction, by such authors as Twain, Tolstoy, Hemingway, Orwell, Vonnegut, Nietzsche, Austen, Shakespeare, Asimov, HG Wells & more. Whatever the subject, Brodkey’s essays are wildly uneven he ranges from fiercely incisive to laughably pretentious.īut from the evidence of Sea Battles on Dry Land, an eclectic collection of Brodkey’s essays, it was New York City and literature–not eros and thanatos–that Brodkey knew best.Download a Free Audiobook from Audible and also ĭownload hundreds of free audio books, mostly classics, to your MP3 player or computer. If, for some reason, you consider yourself a New York intellectual, Sea Battles on Dry Land might encourage you to secede from the tribe. One of the best pieces here is also among the slightest. “The Subway at Christmas” was originally published as a “Talk of the Town” item in The New Yorker, and it is not only beautiful–with its observations of “the gloomy, heartbroken half-light in the cavern at the edge of the dry riverbed of tracks”–but trenchant, too, in its understanding of how class and social tensions emerge in the tiniest details of dress and the most insignificant gestures. Brodkey has sometimes been compared to Marcel Proust and Walt Whitman, but here he reminds me of the late Janet Flanner, The New Yorker ‘s brilliant Paris correspondent for five decades, who understood that fashions and food could tell you as much–indeed, perhaps more–about the spirit of that city than all of Charles de Gaulle’s speeches and a year’s worth of Le Monde combined.īrodkey knew the nervous intimacy that defines New York’s public spaces.
