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John Galsworthy (1867-1933) was an English playwright and novelist who was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1932. A Long-Ago Affair is a poignant story of requited love and betrayal. A 16-year-old boy with a torrid crush on an older married woman finds himself unwittingly facilitating her secret love affair with another man.
John Sir Galsworthy (Author), Cathy Dobson (Narrator)
Audiobook
The Forsyte Saga volume 2: In Chancery
In Chancery forms the second part of John Galsworthy's Forsyte Saga trilogy of love, power, money, and family feuding; chronicling the downfall of an upper middle class family in the turbulent period of social change at the end of the 19th and start of the 20th centuries. It tells of the struggle between Soames and his beautiful wife Irene, who leaves him but cannot persuade him to grant a divorce.
John Sir Galsworthy, John Galsworthy (Author), Martin Jarvis (Narrator)
Audiobook
"A compelling drama and... merciless scrutiny of a newly-monied upper middle class family at the turn of the twentieth century, ‘The Forsyte Saga’ has a sumptuous range of characters; Soames, he of the ‘perpetual sniff’; Old Jolyon, ‘typifying the essential individualism born in the Briton’; the sensuous Bosinney with ‘an air as if he did not quite know on which side his bread was buttered’; Young Jolyon, the free thinker; and, of course, the sexually alluring and impenetrable Irene, catalyst for much dissension within the clan. The Forsytes believe they will live forever, but the unrelenting, imperturbable façade slowly begins to crumble as Aunt Ann, the oldest Forsyte ever, is interred in the family tomb at the end of this first volume. The author makes his presence and opinion felt with beautifully subtle pinpricks of wit which leave one in no doubt what he thought of the accumulation of wealth and property, which typified the materialistic Victorian psyche, at the expense of sensitivity and freedom. As in ‘The Dark Flower’ [also published by Assembled Stories], Galsworthy demonstrates a fundamental understanding of hidden sexual currents and their ability to change our destinies.If you have enjoyed ‘The Forsyte Saga’ on television in the past you will be familiar with this engrossing story; if not, prepare to be completely captivated and engaged by one of the best tales ever told. " "Soames Forsyte is a wealthy... man of property. He has investments, owns a prestigious new house, paintings, a delicate rosewood table and a beautiful wife, Irene, who does not love him. Immensely well narrated by Peter Joyce, with nine more volumes promised during 2010. Family sagas, from Icelandic to Aga, have diverted readers for centuries, but the Forsytes remain the brand leaders. Since the first of its three volumes and two ""interludes"" was published in 1906 there have been various film and TV adaptations but inevitably, with attention spans ever decreasing, the orotundity of Galsworthy's prose has fallen out of fashion. This makes him an obvious choice for audio, along with Scott, Dickens and Proust. Let the reader disentangle all those adverbial subclauses. All you have to do is listen and try to remember who of the 10 original Forsytes – six brothers and four sisters – is who. The clever thing about this edition is that it comes in small, easily digestible portions. Peter Joyce, whose rhetorical resonance is perfect for his subject, has divided the saga into nine volumes...... is it still worth reading? The fact that I, a famously impatient consumer of books, with one finger permanently poised above the fast-forward button, listened to Vol 1 twice before moving on to Vol 2, says it all. Yes, of course it's slow – everything in 1886 (apart from the post) took longer. Mrs Soames Forsyte, the beautiful, unfathomable Irene, might have spent at least 10 minutes just pulling on those exquisite pale grey French kid gloves we first encounter her wearing at Old Jolyon's party to celebrate the engagement of his granddaughter June, Irene's best friend, to Bosinney, a young architect. Soames employs boho Bosinney, with his disconcertingly inattentive sherry-coloured eyes, to build his new house, Irene falls in love with him and leaves home after a terrible . . . no, not another word, listen for yourselves. It was the dialogue that had me constantly rewinding. Here's the coachman, after driving June and Bosinney to the theatre, telling the butler: ""I don't know what to make of 'im. Looks to me for all the world like an 'alf-tamed leopard."" And an exchange between two Forsytes on Irene's provenance:Roger: What was her father?Nicholas: A professor, so they tell me.Roger: There's no money in that.Nicholas: They say her mother's father was cement – [Roger's face brightens] – but he went bankrupt.Roger: Hmph. She's got a foreign look. Soames will have trouble with her, you mark my words. He'll have trouble. And so he does, plenty big trouble, but that's why it hooks you. Those hard-nosed, materialistic, money-obsessed Jolyons, Swithins, Archibalds and Eustaces aren't Strachey's eminent Victorians, but their lives are eminently and endlessly fascinating. "
John Sir Galsworthy (Author), Peter Joyce (Narrator)
Audiobook
"In this, the second volume of the Saga to be released in an unabridged recording by Assembled Stories, Soames’ house continues to be built as his marriage disintegrates. Is Irene having an affair? Certainly her relationship with the architect Bosinney is causing ructions in the family. While attempting reconciliation with his son, Old Jolyon, spurred by June’s suffering as she feels herself losing her lover, sends Young Jolyon to sound the mans intentions. In this meeting Young Jolyon reveals the essence of the Forsytes and warns Bosinney about the nature of the class he is defying. ‘A Forsyte is a man who is decidedly more than less a slave of property. He knows a good thing, he knows a safe thing, and his grip on property - it doesn’t matter whether it be wives, houses, money, or reputation – is his hallmark ….. they are the middle men, the commercials, the pillars of society, the cornerstones of convention; everything that is admirable’.Will the young man heed the warning or continue to cause more anguish within the family - and, much worse, scandal amongst its peers? "
John Sir Galsworthy (Author), Peter Joyce (Narrator)
Audiobook
"The house at Richmond is finished at last, but Soames takes Bosinney to court for exceeding the budget. The final judgement of their case turns on ‘a very fine point’ in their correspondence...The architect does not heed Young Jolyon’s warning and continues to pursue Irene - with fatal consequences...Old Jolyon effects a complete reconciliation with his son and changes his will as a result, further distancing himself from his brother James in the process. The rift will continue through into the next generation... The old man purchases Robin Hill and spends the remaining days of his life in the company of Irene, now teaching music and ‘assisting the Magdelenes of London’. This charming interlude brings Galsworthy’s Book 1 of the Saga to a close. "
John Sir Galsworthy (Author), Peter Joyce (Narrator)
Audiobook
The Forsyte Saga Volume 4: In Chancery Part 1
It is 1899. Old Jolyon has long since been buried at Robin Hill, and with the death of Aunt Susan in 1895 and Roger’s funeral opening this instalment of the Saga, the Forsyte’s are fast becoming aware of their mortality.Yet more problems beset the family. Montague Dartie leaves his wife for Buenos Aires to pursue his latest flame, a dancer. Young Jolyon’s wife has died and his father entrusted him as executor of his will, ensuring that Irene receives the interest on the sum the old man left her.Motor cars are beginning to fill the streets of London and war with the Boers is about to be declared. Soames is now 44 years old, separated from Irene for 12 years and yearning for a son to whom he can leave his property. He meets and begins to woo Annette. Could she give him an heir ? At first he favours the idea and prepares to seek a divorce, but meeting Irene again rekindles that desperate, unfulfilled passion. Why should she not come back to him? He informs Jolyon of his intentions, asking the artist to ‘kindly leave her quite alone’; ‘I can give you no such promise’ comes the firm reply, and the battle begins in earnest.
John Sir Galsworthy (Author), Peter Joyce (Narrator)
Audiobook
The Forsyte Saga Volume 5: In Chancery Part 2
The Forsyte feud continues into the next generation with Jolly and Val involved in a drunken bout of fisticuffs.Soames continues to pursue Irene driving her to seek refuge in Paris. Believing that she has a lover, he puts her under surveillance to obtain evidence. Jolyon travels to Paris on the pretext of discussing business and he and Irene spend some time together unaware their movements are being watched……The love affair of Holly and Val continues to flourish despite Jolly daring the young Dartie to enlist and join him in the fight against the Boers. Soames has a plan which will enable Winifred to divorce and be rid of the adulterous Monty if only the erring husband stays away- but will he? Jolyon returns from France to bid farewell to his son and is greeted by another death at Robin Hill.
John Sir Galsworthy (Author), Peter Joyce (Narrator)
Audiobook
The Forsyte Saga Volume 6: In Chancery Part 3
Soames travels to Paris to make one last attempt to regain Irene and the detective agency think they have found the man involved in the affair.Irene returns to London to seek Jolyon’s help and the two become closer while Soames takes out some insurance with Annette’s mother.The spurned husband confronts the lovers at Robin Hill in a meeting which verges on violence and as devastating news comes from the Front more young Forsytes prepare to serve their country. The century turns and James, the oldest Forsyte, is sinking fast. Will he survive to hear news of an heir?As the next generation of the family are born the Victorian age comes to an end. The Queen’s funeral is witnessed by two newly married Forsyte couples but there is bitter division and little hope of reconciliation.
John Sir Galsworthy (Author), Peter Joyce (Narrator)
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The Forsyte Saga Volume 7: To Let Part 1
Timothy, at just over one hundred years of age, is the last survivor of the ten siblings of Superior Dosset Forsyte. In this latest volume we are introduced to the grandchildren of those Forsytes who first began the Saga. Soames’s daughter Fleur is twenty at the start of the 1920s, a bright, wilful and independent spirit who can twist her father around her little finger. There is also Jon, the offspring of Jolyon and Irene, a sensitive and intelligent, though slightly naïve, young man of the same age. When these two happen to meet, at an art gallery owned by Jolyon’s daughter June, it is love at first sight despite the fulsome objections of both sets of parents.This chance encounter is the first time that Soames has seen Irene since the Queens’ funeral 19 years before and the old fever still consumes him. His second marriage has been a disappointment and again he may be a cuckold, deceived by the louche Belgian, Prosper Profond. Jon and his mother leave for Spain where Jolyon hopes the trip will end the young man’s passionate feelings, while Fleur waits at home and begins to manipulate the adults to get what she wants. Soames, an anguished man, is once more tormented and perplexed by the women in his life.
John Sir Galsworthy (Author), Peter Joyce (Narrator)
Audiobook
The Forsyte Saga Volume 8: To Let Part 2
Jon and his mother go to Spain. The son manages to curtail the visit after six weeks.Meanwhile, Jolyon strengthens his relationship with his eldest daughter, June, who reveals that she sympathises with the young lovers. It is June who helps Fleur in her search for the history of the feud within the family. Prosper Profond, who continues to ingratiate himself with the Forsyte clan, inadvertently discloses the truth. Soames, while dealing with the problems in his second marriage, must now enlighten his daughter about the problems in his first. Although in a state of shock herself, Fleur realizes that Jon may not know the whole truth and there could still be a chance to get what she wants. Ignoring the lovesick appeals of a besotted Michael Mont she resolves to marry Jon, with or without the approval of their parents.
John Sir Galsworthy (Author), Peter Joyce (Narrator)
Audiobook
The Forsyte Saga Volume 9: To Let Part 3
As Jolyons condition worsens he writes a letter to Jon explaining the history of the feud, intending to use it only as a last resort. The boy eventually reads his fathers ‘confession’ and Jolyon is brought down by the stress.The young Mont continues to pay court to Fleur. Soames, hedging his bets, researches the boys background and finds that an alliance with the nobility might have its attractions.Jon now knows the truth and believes that Fleur ought to have told him. Irene absolves her son and tells him to do what he must for his happiness.Under Fleurs influence Soames visits Robin Hill for the last time to resolve the emotional checkmate and meets a stubborn Jon who feels he must remain true to his fathers wishes.Fleur is devastated when she receives this news and in a wounded, unstable frame of mind agrees to marry Mont.Timothy, the last remaining Forsyte of the older generation dies and the funeral is attended only by Soames, his clerk and two servants. The furniture and effects of ‘Forsyte Change’ are sold at auction and three days later Soames visits the Forsyte vault at Highgate cemetery. An airplane ‘booms overhead’ and the new century envelops him. The sun is on his face and there is nature all around but there is a craving in his heart. Will he ever really appreciate any of the beauty and the loving in the world?
John Sir Galsworthy (Author), Peter Joyce (Narrator)
Audiobook
The Forsyte Saga volume 1: The Man of Property
The first volume of John Galsworthy's gripping family drama.
John Sir Galsworthy, John Galsworthy (Author), Martin Jarvis (Narrator)
Audiobook
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