The man with the broken ear

audiobook

The man with the broken ear

by Edmond About

EN·~5 hours·23 chapters

Chapters

23 total
1

DEDICATION OF THE FIRST EDITION.

0:48
2

CHAPTER I. - WHEREIN THEY KILL THE FATTED CALF TO CELEBRATE THE RETURN OF A FRUGAL SON.

16:01
3

CHAPTER II. - UNPACKING BY CANDLE-LIGHT.

7:19
4

CHAPTER III. - THE CRIME OF THE LEARNED PROFESSOR MEISER.

11:12
5

CHAPTER IV. - THE VICTIM.

11:41
6

CHAPTER V. - DREAMS OF LOVE, AND OTHER DREAMS.

14:08
7

CHAPTER VI. - A YOUNG GIRL'S CAPRICE.

7:31
8

CHAPTER VII. - PROFESSOR MEISER'S WILL IN FAVOR OF THE DESICCATED COLONEL.

21:09
9

CHAPTER VIII. - HOW NICHOLAS MEISER, NEPHEW OF JOHN MEISER, EXECUTED HIS UNCLE'S WILL.

10:11
10

CHAPTER IX. - CONSIDERABLE OF A DISTURBANCE IN FONTAINEBLEAU.

14:16

Description

A richly drawn, epistolary tale opens with a playful dedication and a sprawling letter from a proud father to his son, a young physicist who has been whisked away to the Ural mines. The correspondence brims with Victorian pomp, earnest scientific ambition, and a touch of absurdity as the father outlines new estates, a custom‑made scarf from Paris, and grand plans for a personal laboratory. Through this lively prose the reader is introduced to a world where family expectations, provincial politics, and the feverish quest for discovery collide.

The narrative follows the son’s anticipated return to a charming French town, where his father's grand designs and the town’s quirky officials promise both opportunity and comic mishap. Listeners will be drawn into a satire of 19th‑century progress, feeling the tension between personal ambition and familial duty, all rendered in a witty, slightly exaggerated voice that invites both laughter and reflection.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (336K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2007-03-02

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Edmond About

Edmond About

1828–1885

A sharp-eyed French novelist, journalist, and critic, he wrote with wit and energy about politics, society, and everyday life. His books often mix satire, travel, and lively storytelling, which helped make him one of the better-known French writers of the 19th century.

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