We are currently making improvements to the Audible site. In an effort to enhance the accessibility experience for our customers, we have created a page to more easily navigate the new experience, available at the web address www.audible.com/access.
 >   > 
The Man of Property: The Forsyte Saga, Book 1 | [John Galsworthy]
Play The Man of Property: The Forsyte Saga, Book 1

The Man of Property: The Forsyte Saga, Book 1

  • UNABRIDGED
  • by John Galsworthy
  • Narrated by David Case
  • Your Likes make Audible better!

    'Likes' are shared on Facebook and Audible.com. We use your 'likes' to improve Audible.com for all our listeners.

    You can turn off Audible.com sharing from your Account Details page.

    OK
  • Regular Price :$23.07

Two ways to buy!

What's Trending in Fiction:

  • Average Customer Rating
  • Overall
    (94)
    Performance
    (22)
    Story
    (21)
 
  • LENGTH
    13 hrs and 49 mins
  • RELEASE DATE
    09-25-06
  • AUDIO FORMATS
    About Audio Formats
    2 3 4 Enhanced Audio
 

People who bought this also bought...

Publisher's Summary

The Man of Property, the first novel in John Galsworthy's epic social satire The Forsyte Saga, introduces us to Soames Forsyte, a London solicitor and prominent man of his important family. Accustomed to getting whatever he wants, he sets his sights with absolute determination on the beautiful Irene, in spite of her pennilessness and indifference to him. Irene, a lover of art and beauty, eventually accepts his marriage proposal over a life of degraded poverty, but she swears to Soames that she will never be his property. When all his money fails to make up for the absence of love and Irene falls for a young architect, Soames resolves to force the obedience he could not buy.

Galsworthy won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1932 "for his distinguished art of narration, which takes its highest form in The Forsyte Saga".

Family matters: don't miss our other titles in The Forsyte Saga.

Originally published in 1906 / Published by arrangement with Phoenix Recording; (P)2006 by Blackstone Audio Inc.

What Members Say

Average Customer Rating

3.8 (94 ratings)
5 star
 (41)
4 star
 (20)
3 star
 (14)
2 star
 (10)
1 star
 (9)
Overall
4.0 (21 ratings)
5 star
 (11)
4 star
 (4)
3 star
 (3)
2 star
 (1)
1 star
 (2)
Story
4.0 (22 ratings)
5 star
 (11)
4 star
 (5)
3 star
 (2)
2 star
 (2)
1 star
 (2)
Performance
  •  
    JAMES L RICHARDS 11-29-06 Member Since 2003
    HELPFUL VOTES
    19
    ratings
    REVIEWS
    109
    2
    FOLLOWERS
    FOLLOWING
    0
    0
    Overall
    Performance
    Story
    "Brilliant!"

    Brilliant writing brilliantly read! Best Audible selection of 50 heard over several years.

    16 of 16 people found this review helpful
  •  
    victoria New York, NY, United States 12-14-07
    victoria New York, NY, United States 12-14-07 Member Since 2006
    HELPFUL VOTES
    37
    ratings
    REVIEWS
    338
    17
    FOLLOWERS
    FOLLOWING
    1
    4
    Overall
    Performance
    Story
    "Five stars aren't enough..."

    ... for this masterpiece of writing and narration. Galsworthy's tender, wicked irony is perfectly captured and conveyed by David Case, who is THE master among book readers. Each character has his or her distinctive voice which perfectly expresses the personality Galsworthy intended. The richness of the relationships, the vivid social commentary, the HUMOR, are indeed Nobel Prize material.

    I'm now listening to the whole series of nine novels for the third time, and the experience is as rich this time as it was the first. It's more than just fiction. It's a poem, an opera, a feast.

    15 of 15 people found this review helpful
  •  
    Peter Covington, LA, USA 04-08-08
    Peter Covington, LA, USA 04-08-08
    HELPFUL VOTES
    20
    ratings
    REVIEWS
    10
    3
    FOLLOWERS
    FOLLOWING
    1
    0
    Overall
    Performance
    Story
    "A tale of epic proportions"

    I was first introduced to the Forsyte Sage through the 1960s BBC TV adaptation. This audiobook brings it all flooding back. A wonderful portrayal of late Victorian & Edwardian England. It is true that the opening chapters introduce a vast cast of characters, but the tale settles down and they disentangle themselves with skilled assistance of the narrator who is able to play each character quite distinctly. Highly recommended.

    9 of 9 people found this review helpful
  •  
    vote4anya 02-18-08
    vote4anya 02-18-08
    HELPFUL VOTES
    16
    ratings
    REVIEWS
    14
    4
    FOLLOWERS
    FOLLOWING
    0
    0
    Overall
    Performance
    Story
    "Sorry, I just don't get it..."

    I know this is supposed to be a great series and it is well reviewed by others but I just can't get into this book! I've endured 9 chapters and now I'm just giving up.
    The book starts out with SO many characters that I have trouble keeping track of who is who in this family tree. Perhaps it would be better to read the book so that I could go back and review the characters? The reader is very good at emulating all of the different voices but there are just too many characters and details for me to keep things straight. Very little has happened in the plot and I have had to re-listen to much of the book so far just to figure out who everyone is and what is going on.

    13 of 14 people found this review helpful
  •  
    Cariola Chambersburg, PA USA 09-02-12
    Cariola Chambersburg, PA USA 09-02-12 Member Since 2005

    malfi

    HELPFUL VOTES
    496
    ratings
    REVIEWS
    309
    136
    FOLLOWERS
    FOLLOWING
    188
    6
    Overall
    Performance
    Story
    "Gotta Love Those Forsytes!"

    I've been meaning to read The Forsyte Saga for years, having enjoyed both TV dramatizations (1967 and 2002). And even though I know the story, I very much enjoyed this first book in the saga. Galsworthy gives us a lush, detailed view of late Victorian England's upper middle class and their mania for property and respectability. Like every family, the Forsytes have their secrets and black sheep, and that makes them all the more intriguing. The focus here is the ramrod-spined solicitor Soames and his unhappy wife, Irene. Soames had courted Irene more for her beauty than for love, treating her like one of his exquisite objéts d'art. So determined was he to have her that he promised to let her go if she wanted her freedom. And here lies the crux of the story: Irene is dreadfully unhappy, yet Soames refuses to let her go.

    Galsworthy has created a cast of one-of-a-kind characters (or if they now seem like sterotypes, they were one-of-a-kind when first created). There are the senior Forsytes, Old Jolyon, James, Roger, and the aunts; the "black sheep," Young Jolyon, who married beneath him and was cut off by his father; Winifred, married to the alcoholic bounder Monty D'Arty; June, Young Jolyon's philanthropic daughter from a first marriage, and her dashing architect fiancé, Philip Bossiney, secretly dubbed by the family "The Buccaneer"; and many, many more.

    There's a reason why Galsworthy's novels were so popular--and why not one but two dramatizations have been made. Quite simply, The Forsyte Saga is a jolly good story. I'm looking forward to moving on to the next six books in the saga.

    David Case's voice would might start to grate on my ears--except that it has the perfect haughtiness for these stories.

    5 of 5 people found this review helpful
  •  
    mary j aboughadareh Reston, VA USA 07-08-09
    mary j aboughadareh Reston, VA USA 07-08-09 Member Since 2007
    HELPFUL VOTES
    176
    ratings
    REVIEWS
    335
    89
    FOLLOWERS
    FOLLOWING
    8
    0
    Overall
    Performance
    Story
    "Boring"

    I thought this book was boring. The only thing that got me through it was the reader David Case who was excellent. I could listen to him read anything.

    2 of 2 people found this review helpful
  •  
    Alicia Baltimore, MD, United States 12-25-10
    Alicia Baltimore, MD, United States 12-25-10 Member Since 2008
    HELPFUL VOTES
    57
    ratings
    REVIEWS
    43
    25
    FOLLOWERS
    FOLLOWING
    4
    0
    Overall
    Performance
    Story
    "all that is human"

    The Forsyth Saga is so complete, so thorough, so human. Each character is someone with a distinct identity that still resonates with a believable individuality. Even with the weight of so much social and moral complexity (the human condition in the specific), Galsworthy is entertaining, comic and tells a ceaselessly engrossing story. What a master; to maintain all the varying hues and colors of this story of human lives in bathos and in trivia, and weave a cloth that is delightful to behold! I love this great work of nine novels, beautifully interconnected and endlessly full of interest and wisdom. Real them all!

    1 of 1 people found this review helpful
  •  
    Jessica Zapopan, Mexico 05-19-13
    Jessica Zapopan, Mexico 05-19-13 Member Since 2013
    ratings
    REVIEWS
    1
    1
    Overall
    Performance
    Story
    "HORRIBLE!!!!"
    Would you be willing to try another one of David Case’s performances?

    Never!!!! His narration was boring and annoying!,,Maybe the book was not that bad but with this narrator it was terrible!!!!


    0 of 0 people found this review helpful
  •  
    Lloyd Spokane, WA, USA 03-23-09
    Lloyd Spokane, WA, USA 03-23-09
    HELPFUL VOTES
    7
    ratings
    REVIEWS
    135
    4
    FOLLOWERS
    FOLLOWING
    0
    0
    Overall
    Performance
    Story
    "What a Drag!"

    I have tried 4 times to listen to this book. I love a good long epic or family saga. The naritive and the reader are just so dry and hard to follow. So boring I can not listen past the 2nd chapter and when I do try I have to start over because I really don't follow the story line.
    I only listen to unabridged audio and usually listen to 10 hours a day. This is the first book I have bought out of the 400 in my library that I will not even try to read again.

    2 of 4 people found this review helpful
  •  
    koni Frisco, TX, United States 03-03-08
    koni Frisco, TX, United States 03-03-08 Member Since 2007
    HELPFUL VOTES
    14
    ratings
    REVIEWS
    949
    16
    FOLLOWERS
    FOLLOWING
    0
    0
    Overall
    Performance
    Story
    "No hook"

    This was a good book, but hard to get into. I did buy the next in the series, though.

    2 of 6 people found this review helpful
  • Showing: 1-10 of 11 results PREVIOUS12NEXT

Report Inappropriate Content

If you find this review inappropriate and think it should be removed from our site, let us know. This report will be reviewed by Audible and we will take appropriate action.

CANCEL

Thank You

Your report has been received. It will be reviewed by Audible and we will take appropriate action.