Ahasverus : $b Dramatische episode in één bedrijf

audiobook

Ahasverus : $b Dramatische episode in één bedrijf

by Herman Heijermans

NL·~47 minutes·5 chapters

Chapters

5 total
1

BIJLAGE.

18:24
2

PERSONEN:

0:25
3

AHASVERUS.

27:13
4

Inhoudsopgave

0:09
5

Colofon - Beschikbaarheid

1:26

Description

A mischievous narrator pulls listeners into a literary caper set in bustling turn‑of‑the‑century Amsterdam. When a request arrives to correct a missing Russian name on a playbill, the writer decides to turn the whole affair into a playful hoax, presenting his own drama, “Ahasverus,” as a translation of a fictitious Russian author. The story unfolds through a cascade of letters, newspaper clippings and witty exchanges that blur the line between fact and invention.

The narrative weaves together colorful figures—a former concertmaster fresh from London, a boisterous bar‑room crew, and a curious playwright—who chatter about art, ambition, and the absurdities of theatrical life. Their rambunctious evenings in the American Bar and strolls down Kalverstraat set a vivid backdrop for the unfolding intrigue, while the ever‑present press amplifies the ruse, promising a performance that teeters between authenticity and farce.

Listeners are treated to a clever blend of satire and backstage drama, a snapshot of a cultural scene where truth is as fluid as the ink on a playbill. The first act invites you to follow the tangled threads of authorship, humor, and the inevitable anticipation of a stage debut that may never be quite what it seems.

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Details

Language

nl

Duration

~47 minutes (45K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Original publisher

Netherlands: De maatschappij voor goede en goedkoope lectuur, 1911.

Credits

Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net/ for Project Gutenberg

Release date

2023-07-03

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Herman Heijermans

Herman Heijermans

1864–1924

Best known for the searing play The Good Hope, this Dutch writer brought working-class lives and social injustice to the stage with unusual force and sympathy. His work helped make modern drama in the Netherlands feel urgent, political, and deeply human.

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