Fekete gyémántok

audiobook

Fekete gyémántok

by Mór Jókai

HU·~14 hours·49 chapters

Chapters

49 total
1

MÁSODIK RÉSZ. - MIKOR MÁR NEM FÉR EL AZ EMBER A FÖLDÖN. - ŐSAPÁNK.

5:34
2

EGY FEKETE TÁJ.

16:41
3

A FEKETE GYÉMÁNTOK RABJA.

17:06
4

A MÁSIK FEKETE GYÉMÁNTOK.

26:01
5

AZ EMBEREVŐ.

13:00
6

A PÉNZCSINÁLÓ.

26:25
7

DOKTOR UR!

20:45
8

THEUDELINDA GRÓFNŐ.

28:17
9

AZ ALBUM ÉS LAKÓI.

24:11
10

AZ ÖRDÖGŰZŐ.

58:33

Description

A narrator‑scientist treats the planet like a massive, layered tome, each stratum a page written in stone, fire and water. With a blend of mythic imagination and geological fact, the story follows an eager mind as it drills through granite, basalt and vapor, listening to the silent “letters” left by ages long before humanity. The prose weaves together the awe of ancient volcanoes, the hum of primordial steam, and the whisper of rocks that have witnessed the birth of iron, gold and diamond, inviting listeners to feel the pulse of the Earth itself.

From the first fern‑covered seas to the towering reptiles of the Devonian, the tale unfolds a vivid panorama of vanished ecosystems. As ancient fish glide through silurian waters and massive iguanodons roam Jurassic landscapes, we are reminded that our modern world sits atop these forgotten chapters. The narrative balances scientific insight with lyrical wonder, offering a fresh perspective on how the deep past shapes the present, and beckoning listeners to imagine what “yesterday” truly looked like.

Details

Language

hu

Duration

~14 hours (830K 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

2017-09-29

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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