Poor Richard's Almanac Audiobook By Benjamin Franklin cover art

Poor Richard's Almanac

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Poor Richard's Almanac

By: Benjamin Franklin
Narrated by: Robert Bethune
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The prefaces, proverbs, and poems of Benjamin Franklin, originally printed in editions of Poor Richard's Almanac for 1733 to 1758.

As Benjamin Franklin himself put it: "Courteous Listener: Besides the astronomical Calculations, and other Things usually contain’d in Almanacks, which have their daily Use indeed while the Year continues, but then become of no Value, I have constantly interspers'd moral Sentences, prudent Maxims, and wise Sayings, many of them containing much good Sense in very few Words, and therefore apt to leave strong and lasting Impressions on the Memory of young Persons, whereby they may receive Benefit as long as they live, when both Almanack and Almanac-maker have been long thrown by and forgotten. If I now and then insert a Joke or two, that seem to have little in them, my Apology is, that such may have their Use, since perhaps for their Sake light airy Minds peruse the rest, and so are struck by somewhat of more Weight and Moment. The Verses on the Heads of the Months are also design'd to have the same Tendency. I need not tell thee that many of them are of my own Making. If thou hast any Judgment in Poetry, thou wilt easily discern the Workman from the Bungler. I know as well as thee, that I am no Poet born, and it is a Trade I never learnt, nor indeed could learn. If I make Verses 't is in Spight—Of Nature and my Stars, I write. Why then should I give my Readers bad Lines of my own, when good Ones of other Peoples are so plenty? 'T is methinks a poor Excuse for the bad Entertainment of Guests that the Food we set before them, tho' coarse and ordinary, is of one's own raising, off one’s own Plantation, [etc.] when there is Plenty of what is ten times better, to be had in the Market. On the contrary, I assure ye, my Friends, that I have procur'd the best I could for ye, and much good may it do ye. I am thy poor Friend, to serve thee, Richard Saunders."

Since Ben Franklin would have been amazed at audiobooks, let these few details be added: unlike most editions of Poor Richard, this one includes essentially all of the text, not just the aphorisms and sayings. This gives you, Courteous Listener, a much better appreciation of how Franklin wrote and thought. In particular, you will find that the full body of the Poor Richard almanacs contains a great deal of religious and spiritual thought in which Franklin laid out and propounded his understanding of Christianity as it stood in his day. Last but not least, since a long parade of sayings, poems, etc., would be dull all strung together, this edition includes snippets of music between them, drawn from about four dozen Colonial-era tunes and imitating the sound of Colonial instruments such as flute, fife, lute, English guitar, music box, and harpsichord. May you enjoy it and draw benefit from it, as Ben himself would have wished!

Public Domain (P)2011 Robert Bethune
Americas Classics Personal Development Personal Success Poetry Revolution & Founding United States World Inspiring

Featured Article: 45+ Wise, Wry, and Surprisingly Timely Benjamin Franklin Quotes


One of the Founding Fathers of the United States, Benjamin Franklin was a man of many talents. He was a brilliant scientist, inventor, writer, diplomat, and humorist who left his mark on the world through his creative drive, intellectual prowess, and unique sense of humor. He lived an extraordinary life that continues to have an impact. Read on for Ben Franklin’s epochal quotes from his autobiography, correspondences, and Poor Richard’s Almanac.

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The narrator was chosen well, as he captured the playful and simultaneously sagacious spirit of the character of Richard well. The addition of the music likewise brings the listener into the simplicity of the times, and lightens the mood.

Intent to be good and sense of humor required

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There were a couple times where the audio work omitted some potions of the book. One instance claimed it was because a table is boring to hear in audio form - I grant that may be true, but I've listened to it in other books and got through it.
A second instance was a reading of another authors work, I wished that hadn't been omitted. 1) The book had already read other authors accounts (Bitter Cold of Hudson Bay) and late in the book, Poor Richard admits that only 1/10 of the book was his own work, the rest being compiles from the wisdom of the ages.

There were a couple times when my iphone app hung up on a portion/section of the work. I'm not what caused it, but it was repeatable. I had to skip around to get it to work... frustrating... not sure if this is a problem with the file or the app or the phone.

There were times when the quotes repeated in different years - I'm not sure if this is bad editing on the Audio book, or the original book. There are quotes that repeat, with a twist from prior years, but specifically there are quotes interspersed that are identical.

Lastly, chapter 37 seems to be a copy from a section in the middle of the book... It wasn't introduces as a new year, it just jumped into a complete repeat of an almanac year.

I did like the Actor's voice and accent, I could imagine I was really listening to Ben Franklin. Also, the music in between the quotes and passages was a good addition... The book would have been too hard to digest as audio without them.

Some omissions

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The loud and obnoxious music is a distraction from the content. I want a refund.

Terrible

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This book is wonderful, the voice is perfect accept for the music and sound affects. The music would fit for a book for a toddler.

lame music inbetween every quote

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The actual narration or writing isn't an issue, but unfortunately in the adaptation of this to an audiobook between each thought (frequently every 1-3 sentences) there's an instrumental intermission that goes on perhaps ten times as long as it should. It's almost as if they're trying to extend the total duration of the audiobook for some reason? In anyway event, or regardless of the reason, it makes this otherwise good audiobook very difficult to listen to. I keep coming back to it trying again to just ignore the music intermissions, but at some points they seem to take up more total time than the words, and I'm giving up entirely.

Great text, voice, but terrible frequent long audio interruptions

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