
The Turn of the Screw
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Narrated by:
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Simon Vance
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Vanessa Benjamin
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By:
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Henry James
About this listen
With its possibly ambiguous content and powerful narrative technique, the story challenges the listener to determine if the unnamed governess is correctly reporting events or is instead an unreliable neurotic with an overheated imagination.
©2006 Henry James (P)2008 Blackstone Audio, Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...
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The modern audience hasn't had a chance to truly appreciate the unknowing dread that readers would have felt when reading Bram Stoker's original 1897 manuscript. Most modern productions employ campiness or sound effects to try to bring back that gothic tension, but we've tried something different. By returning to Stoker's original storytelling structure - a series of letters and journal entries voiced by Jonathan Harker, Dr. Van Helsing, and other characters - with an all-star cast of narrators, we've sought to recapture its originally intended horror and power.
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IS THAT NOT SO?
- By Jim "The Impatient" on 11-05-15
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The Wings of the Dove
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Milly Theale is a young, beautiful, and fabulously wealthy American. When she arrives in London and meets the equally beautiful but impoverished Kate Croy, they form an intimate friendship. But nothing is as it seems: materialism, romance, self-delusion, and ultimately fatal illness insidiously contaminate the glamorous social whirl.
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Not an easy read but SO worth it!
- By Julie Gray on 10-31-17
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H. P. Lovecraft's Book of the Supernatural
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H. P. Lovecraft is arguably the most important horror writer of the 20th century. Culled from his 1927 essay "Supernatural Horror in Literature”, Lovecraft acknowledges those authors and stories that he feels are the very finest the horror field has to offer, including Washington Irving, Edgar Allan Poe, Henry James, Rudyard Kipling, Bram Stoker, Robert Louis Stevenson, Guy de Maupassant, Ambrose Bierce, and Arthur Conan Doyle. This chilling collection includes 20 works, each prefaced by Lovecraft's own opinions and insights in each author’s work.
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Not all the stories are complete
- By SteffiT on 10-21-13
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The American
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Self-made American millionaire Christopher Newman arrives in Paris brimming with hope and optimism, excited to experience the culture and, hopefully, find the perfect woman to become his wife. After a chance encounter with American expatriate friends, his attention is drawn to Madame de Cintré, 25-year-old widowed daughter of the late Marquis de Bellegarde. Having fallen on hard times, the centuries-old aristocratic family permits Newman's courtship to proceed; however, they later persuade the widow to break off her engagement to the nouveau-riche businessman.
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excellent reading
- By Andorboth on 12-03-22
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Mrs Gereth, a wealthy widow, is dreading the day that her son, Owen, gets married. She hopes that he will marry a woman who will appreciate their home and all of its treasures as she does. So she enlists the help of Fleda Vetch to try to corrupt the impending marriage of her son and Mona Brigstock - a philistine who is determined to marry Owen in order to inherit Mrs Gereth’s valuable possessions and home by any means. Meanwhile, Fleda hides her real feelings towards Owen. Even when he ends up feeling the same way, Fleda cannot bring herself to marry him as this would force him to break his engagement to Mona, and thus betray all of her own ideals.
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Outstanding
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The Haunting of Hill House
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-
Overall
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Performance
-
Story
Four seekers have come to the ugly, abandoned old mansion: Dr. Montague, an occult scholar looking for solid evidence of the psychic phenomenon called haunting; Theodora, his lovely and lighthearted assistant; Eleanor, a lonely, homeless girl well acquainted with poltergeists; and Luke, the adventurous future heir of Hill House.
-
-
Well written horror tale
- By C K White on 02-11-14
By: Shirley Jackson
-
Dracula [Audible Edition]
- By: Bram Stoker
- Narrated by: Alan Cumming, Tim Curry, Simon Vance, and others
- Length: 15 hrs and 27 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
The modern audience hasn't had a chance to truly appreciate the unknowing dread that readers would have felt when reading Bram Stoker's original 1897 manuscript. Most modern productions employ campiness or sound effects to try to bring back that gothic tension, but we've tried something different. By returning to Stoker's original storytelling structure - a series of letters and journal entries voiced by Jonathan Harker, Dr. Van Helsing, and other characters - with an all-star cast of narrators, we've sought to recapture its originally intended horror and power.
-
-
IS THAT NOT SO?
- By Jim "The Impatient" on 11-05-15
By: Bram Stoker
-
The Wings of the Dove
- By: Henry James
- Narrated by: Juliet Stevenson
- Length: 22 hrs and 55 mins
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Overall
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Performance
-
Story
Milly Theale is a young, beautiful, and fabulously wealthy American. When she arrives in London and meets the equally beautiful but impoverished Kate Croy, they form an intimate friendship. But nothing is as it seems: materialism, romance, self-delusion, and ultimately fatal illness insidiously contaminate the glamorous social whirl.
-
-
Not an easy read but SO worth it!
- By Julie Gray on 10-31-17
By: Henry James
-
H. P. Lovecraft's Book of the Supernatural
- 20 Classic Tales of the Macabre, Chosen by the Master of Horror Himself
- By: Henry James, Washington Irving, Edgar Allan Poe, and others
- Narrated by: Davina Porter, Steven Crossley, Bronson Pinchot
- Length: 16 hrs and 45 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
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H. P. Lovecraft is arguably the most important horror writer of the 20th century. Culled from his 1927 essay "Supernatural Horror in Literature”, Lovecraft acknowledges those authors and stories that he feels are the very finest the horror field has to offer, including Washington Irving, Edgar Allan Poe, Henry James, Rudyard Kipling, Bram Stoker, Robert Louis Stevenson, Guy de Maupassant, Ambrose Bierce, and Arthur Conan Doyle. This chilling collection includes 20 works, each prefaced by Lovecraft's own opinions and insights in each author’s work.
-
-
Not all the stories are complete
- By SteffiT on 10-21-13
By: Henry James, and others
-
The American
- By: Henry James
- Narrated by: Adam Sims
- Length: 14 hrs and 13 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
Self-made American millionaire Christopher Newman arrives in Paris brimming with hope and optimism, excited to experience the culture and, hopefully, find the perfect woman to become his wife. After a chance encounter with American expatriate friends, his attention is drawn to Madame de Cintré, 25-year-old widowed daughter of the late Marquis de Bellegarde. Having fallen on hard times, the centuries-old aristocratic family permits Newman's courtship to proceed; however, they later persuade the widow to break off her engagement to the nouveau-riche businessman.
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excellent reading
- By Andorboth on 12-03-22
By: Henry James
-
The Spoils of Poynton
- By: Henry James
- Narrated by: Maureen O'Brien
- Length: 7 hrs and 29 mins
- Unabridged
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Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
Mrs Gereth, a wealthy widow, is dreading the day that her son, Owen, gets married. She hopes that he will marry a woman who will appreciate their home and all of its treasures as she does. So she enlists the help of Fleda Vetch to try to corrupt the impending marriage of her son and Mona Brigstock - a philistine who is determined to marry Owen in order to inherit Mrs Gereth’s valuable possessions and home by any means. Meanwhile, Fleda hides her real feelings towards Owen. Even when he ends up feeling the same way, Fleda cannot bring herself to marry him as this would force him to break his engagement to Mona, and thus betray all of her own ideals.
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Outstanding
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wonderful novel, wonderful reader, poor recording
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Six years after four family members died of arsenic poisoning, the three remaining Blackwoods—elder, agoraphobic sister Constance; wheelchair-bound Uncle Julian; and 18-year-old Mary Katherine, or, Merricat—live together in pleasant isolation. Merricat has developed an idiosyncratic system of rules and protective magic to guard the estate against intrusions from hostile villagers. But one day a stranger arrives—cousin Charles, with his eye on the Blackwood fortune.
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The narration changed my interpretation
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Couldn't get past the terrible American accents.
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The Golden Bowl
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If you don't love this book, it's your fault
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Hell House
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Hell House is like Hill House, but fiercer
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Audible presents a special edition of The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde narrated by Richard Armitage. With Robert Louis Stevenson's The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, Richard Armitage tells the story of a conflicted man who seeks a remedy to free the monster inside him from the clutches of his conscience. Following his celebrated performance of David Copperfield, Armitage delivers another powerhouse performance as the narrator of this Gothic tale.
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Changed my understanding of processing literature
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The Aspern Papers
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Overall
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One of the wittiest and most scathing of Henry James' novellas, The Aspern Papers chronicles the attempt to extract the valuable letters of the famous and recently deceased poet Jeffrey Aspern from the hands of his past lover and formidable adversary in the battle Juliana Bordereau. The plot was reputedly suggested to James by a story he heard of an illicit attempt to get hold of several of Lord Byron's letters.
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Cat and mouse
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Great reading of troublesome story
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It is a June day in London in 1923, and the lovely Clarissa Dalloway is having a party. Whom will she see? Her friend Peter, back from India, who has never really stopped loving her? What about Sally, with whom Clarissa had her life’s happiest moment? Meanwhile, the shell-shocked Septimus Smith is struggling with his life on the same London day.
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One Tough Read Perfectly Delivered
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Ghost Stories of an Antiquary
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
The powerful sense of evil – darkness, creepy hairy presences, cloaks, hoods, talons and tentacles – pervades these classic ghost stories by M.R. James. A Cambridge scholar himself, James explored what happens when academics dabble in things they don’t understand and unleash forces of which they know nothing.
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Great performances of the classic
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Story
Halloween, 1963. They call him the October Boy, or Ol' Hacksaw Face, or Sawtooth Jack. Whatever the name, everybody in this small Midwestern town knows who he is. How he rises from the cornfields every Halloween, a butcher knife in his hand, and makes his way toward town, where gangs of teenage boys eagerly await their chance to confront the legendary nightmare. Both the hunter and the hunted, the October Boy is the prize in an annual rite of life and death. Pete McCormick knows that killing the October Boy is his one chance to escape a dead-end future in this one-horse town.
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Good book
- By Jimmy on 01-06-22
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Frankenstein
- Penguin Classics
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- Unabridged
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A terrifying vision of scientific progress without moral limits, Mary Shelley's Frankenstein leads the listener on an unsettling journey from the sublime beauty of the Swiss alps to the desolate waste of the arctic circle. Obsessed with the idea of creating life itself, Victor Frankenstein plunders graveyards for the material with which to fashion a new being, shocking his creation to life with electricity. But this botched creature, rejected by its creator and denied human companionship, sets out to destroy Frankenstein and all that he holds dear.
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Absolutely loved this book!
- By Landon on 11-15-19
By: Mary Shelley
What listeners say about The Turn of the Screw
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Leesha
- 11-05-12
Psychological study disguised as a ghost story
Any additional comments?
This brilliant book is a psychological study disguised a ghost story.
To really understand this book, you have to know something about the time it was written. This book was published in 1898 in Victorian England, in a society so uptight, it was considered improper to utter the word "leg" in mixed company. Gasp! Victorian society with riddled with blatant hypocrisy and double standards. On the surface, it was rigid, prudish and stuffy but this was to camouflage the sexual and moral decadence that often went on behind closed doors. While the legs of furniture were draped with cloth to avoid appearing too sexy, the patriarch of the house might be molesting the scullery maid when nobody was looking.
There are two first-person narrators throughout the story. Our first narrator introduces us to the story and gives us some background info. He's crafting of the story. The second narrator, the Governess, is telling her version of the story within the main story.
On the surface, this is a ghost story told from the point of view of a young, newly hired governess who will be in charge of a young boy and his sister in a haunted manor. The new governess begins seeing what she believes are ghosts peering into the windows. Are they really ghosts? Or is it a peeping Tom spying on the young children? Is this governess hallucinating? Everything is vague and it is left to the reader to decide these things.
Beneath the surface, this is the story of child sex abuse and pedophilia. Immediately after the governess starts her new job, the head housekeeper passes on some gossip about the boy Miles. She says that in spite of his angelic innocent demeanor, the boy has been "bad" in the past, he would disappear for hours in the company of Peter Quint who was "much too free with the boy” and engaged in "depravity." To deal with the disturbing scandal, young Miles was sent away to boarding school but he was quickly expelled after he tells some of his classmates about the sordid things Peter Quint did to him.
The author purposely misleads the reader about the true identity of many of the book's characters. At the beginning of the book, a small group of guests sits around a fire telling stories in the evening. An older man named Douglas tells the story we read. Douglas appears to be telling a story about himself when he was a child, changing his name to Miles. There is an Uncle who, for mysterious reasons, suddenly leaves his Grand Manor House and with no explanation, refuses to ever see Miles again. Could the Uncle and Quint, the man who molested Miles/Douglas, be the same person? There are other moments in the story when the Governess and the housekeeper complete each other's sentences, as if they are one person, talking to themselves.
Why would the author deliberately make things so confusing for the reader with a cover story about a haunted manor? It is all probably part of an elaborate smokescreen to veil the real, much more shocking, scandalous subject matter: pedophilia. Because one did not speak of such depraved matters like pedophilia in repressed Victorian England, Henry James had to jump through hoops to veil the real subject of his novel. Genius, when you think about it
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5 people found this helpful
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- Michael
- 01-03-13
Strange, ambiguous - a dissatisfaction that lasts
What did you like best about The Turn of the Screw? What did you like least?
It had a captivating tension that unfolded both slowly and rapidly. It had an ambiguity that created mystery. The ambiguity remained unresolved, creating ultimate dissatisfaction. But the dissatisfaction lasts in a way that is paradoxically satisfying. The (non) resolution left me annoyed, and as if I was supposed to have viewed the story another way all along.I suspect the reaction to it in the early 21st century may be quite different to when it was first written.
Would you recommend The Turn of the Screw to your friends? Why or why not?
Probably yes
What about Simon Vance and Vanessa Benjamin ’s performance did you like?
old English voices and modulating with different charactes.
Do you think The Turn of the Screw needs a follow-up book? Why or why not?
I don't think this question makes sense.
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3 people found this helpful
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- Sher from Provo
- 12-16-13
Ghost Story
I haven't decided if the governess is telling the truth or trying to hide something about herself. Or maybe she is delusional.
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6 people found this helpful
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Overall
- cristina
- 12-16-10
Ultimately disappointing
The mystery is not a mystery to the modern reader -- only to the protagonist (who is not easy to like -- I simply didn't care what happened to her). The ending is too predictable -- and unsatisfying.
The classic "gothic horror" tone is entertaining, I guess (that's why I gave it three stars), but you should read it more as a short story (it IS short). And do not expect Simon Vance to be the reader -- he is out of the story completely in less than 15 minutes.
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5 people found this helpful
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- Russell Bernard
- 11-06-16
Who done it, Murder or love?
I love the mystery of this story and i go back and forth on the ending depending on my mood. This is a great astory that is written so well that you get to decide the ending.
Narrration is not to be missed.
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- Sarah R. Jacobs
- 09-25-15
I didn't think I liked Henry James
But I do. I was just too young to "get" Henry James before. Vanessa Benjamin is perfect for this book.
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2 people found this helpful
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- D. Cobos
- 10-18-22
Good story but not too scary
I enjoyed this book, even though it wasn't as scary as I'd hoped it would be. Great narration, and a creepy, slow-building story line.
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- Jason Mecchi
- 06-25-23
A true classic
I do really enjoy the story and the performance. the work may be a bit dated though.
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- Silenced Majority
- 05-10-23
An Enduring Classic Wonder
This is o e of the books that started it all, the whole victorian "gothic" ghost story genre. It's positively brilliant. I feel sorry for those leaving the reviews calling this story "boring". It's enthralling. It's terrifying. It's psychological horror. It's cerebral and intelligent. And all the confused reviewers calling this "old English"? This is very, very *Modern* English. Even Shakespeare was Modern English. Old English is not at all intelligible to today's English speakers. It's closer to German than today's English. It wasn't even intelligible to Chaucer, whose work was in Middle English, which is several hundred years more recent than "old" English. It's sad that our kids don't know their heritage and think Henry James is "boring". He's way better than anything produced today. Masterful.
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- Darwin8u
- 03-12-13
Compelling, creepy and rich in its ambiguity
My first exposure to Henry James was this tight little psycho-drama of a ghost story. 'Turn of the Screw' is one of those amazing little stories that twists the reader back and forth between the extremes of believing the narrator is legitimate in her fear of actual ghosts or believing she is simply mad. James' story turns on this dilemma. One slight rotation to the right and all bets are off.
For a ghost story, I was far more creeped out by the two 'angelic' children, the vacant setting, and the remote English country house. Anyway, while not blown away by the story, I still found it compelling, creepy and rich in its ambiguity.
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26 people found this helpful