A kik kétszer halnak meg (1. rész)

audiobook

A kik kétszer halnak meg (1. rész)

by Mór Jókai

HU·~11 hours·35 chapters

Chapters

35 total
1

ELSŐ RÉSZ A „TEGNAP“

0:01
2

ABBAN A TÓTOK ORSZÁGÁBAN.

11:22
3

ILLAVAY FERENCZ URAM TÜKRE.

11:14
4

GOROMBOLYI ŐRNAGY.

4:58
5

A HÓBORTOS.

19:11
6

A SZÉP KISÉRTET.

12:26
7

AZ UTOLSÓ TEMETVÉNYI GRÓF.

16:13
8

ZSIBORÁK.

17:37
9

A HADVEZETŐ.

16:15
10

A VÉGHETETLEN GAZDAG EMBER.

6:12

Description

A vivid tapestry of late‑nineteenth‑century Hungary unfurls, inviting listeners into a landscape where rivers carve ever‑changing channels through forested hills and ancient fortresses rise like stone poems against the sky. The narrator guides us through the Vág Valley’s spectacular panoramas—glimmering lakes, hidden caves, and crumbling castles that still whisper the ambitions of kings, knights, and forgotten nobles. Amidst this richly described terrain, the lingering presence of the legendary Báthory Erzsébet haunts a ruined castle, her pale legend entwined with the blood‑stained stories of the land.

The novel’s first act weaves together these atmospheric details with the lives of those who inhabit them: a solitary young knight yearning for honor, villagers whose daily rhythms echo the region’s turbulent past, and the restless spirits that linger in the stone walls. As the river flows and the hills shift, the story hints at the brewing conflicts that will test loyalties and reshape destinies, all while the timeless beauty of the countryside remains a steadfast, almost living character.

Details

Full title

A kik kétszer halnak meg (1. rész) Regény

Language

hu

Duration

~11 hours (673K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Albert László from page images generously made available by the Google Books Library Project

Release date

2018-03-27

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Mór Jókai

Mór Jókai

1825–1904

A giant of 19th-century Hungarian literature, this remarkably prolific novelist blended adventure, romance, humor, and sharp observation of national life. His stories helped shape how generations of readers imagined Hungary’s past and present.

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