Audiobook: Treasure Chest of My Bookhouse

Full of delightful fairy tales, charming poems and engaging stories, this is the fourth volume of the “My Bookhouse” series for little ones. Originally published in the 1920’s as a six volume set, these books, edited by Olive Beaupre Miller, contained the best in children’s literature, stories, poems and nursery rhymes. They progressed in difficulty through the different volumes.

Other Audiobook

Audiobook: People of the Black Circle (version 2)

The People of the Black Circle” is one of the original novellas about Conan the

Audiobook: Народные русские сказки (Russian Fairy Tales), Выпуск 2

Коллекция “Народные русские сказки” А.Н. Афанасьева впервые представила в печати народную сказочную традицию в своём

Audiobook: Stories of North Pole Adventure

This volume does not pretend to be a history of Artic exploration. My aim has

Audiobook: Poems Recorded in Deptford and Greenwich

Armed with a hand-held digital recorder and the Penguin Book of English Verse, LibriVox’s UK

Audiobook: Valda berättelser

A selection of short stories by Selma Lagerlöf. In Swedish, but with a short foreword

Audiobook: Triumphant Democracy

Subtitled “Fifty Years’ March of the Republic,” this is steel tycoon Andrew Carnegie’s love letter

Audiobook: One Day More

A one-act play. Eccentric (crazy?) Captain Hagberd has been waiting for years for his son

Audiobook: Short Poetry Collection 215

This is a collection of 49 poems read in English by LibriVox volunteers for April

Audiobook: Theologico-Political Treatise

Written by the Dutch philosopher Baruch Spinoza, the Tractatus Theologico-Politicus or Theologico-Political Treatise was one

Audiobook: Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit (version 2)

Martin Chuzzlewit was Dickens 6th novel, serially published in 1843 – 44. Irrespective of the

Audiobook: Against Celsus Book 4

Against Celsus, preserved entirely in Greek, is a major apologetics work by the Church Father

Audiobook: Helping Himself; or Grant Thornton’s Ambition (version 2)

“wish we were not so terribly poor, Grant,” said Mrs. Thornton, in a discouraged tone.