Preview
  • To Let

  • The Forsyte Saga, Book 3
  • By: John Galsworthy
  • Narrated by: David Case
  • Length: 9 hrs and 41 mins
  • 4.5 out of 5 stars (111 ratings)

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To Let

By: John Galsworthy
Narrated by: David Case
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Publisher's summary

This third novel concludes John Galsworthy's Forsyte saga, the monumental chronicle of the moneyed Forsyte family, whose values are at war with its passions.

In To Let, Irene's son Jon and Soames' daughter Fleur, now both 19 years old, fall in love. But when Jon learns of the past feud between their families, he decides that he cannot marry Fleur. To drive her from his mind, he travels to America with his mother Irene. Fleur now throws herself at her long-standing admirer, Michael Mont, a fashionable baronet's son, and the two are married.

Soames Forsyte learns that his second wife, Annette, has been unfaithful to him, and is left desolately contemplating the sale of Robin Hill. When Timothy Forsyte, the last of the old generation, dies at the age of 100, the Forsyte family begins to disintegrate.

John Galsworthy received the Nobel Prize for literature in 1932.

Family matters: don't miss our other titles in The Forsyte Chronicles.
(P)2006 Blackstone Audio Inc.
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Critic reviews

"A social satire of epic proportions and one that does not suffer by comparison with Thackeray's Vanity Fair...the whole comedy of manners, convincing both in its fidelity to life and as a work of art." (New York Times)
"[Galsworthy] has carried the history of his time through three generations, and his success in mastering so excellently his enormously difficult material, both in its scope and in its depth, remains an extremely memorable feat in English literature." (Anders Osterling, Nobel Prize presentation speech, 1932)

What listeners say about To Let

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    5 out of 5 stars
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Still excellent

I probably prefer the older Forsytes, but am still eager to keep listening. There was an issue with this book: quite often a sentence or two would be repeated. Some minor editing should be done.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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lines repeated

I enjoyed this book the only thing that really bothered me wahs sometimes the lines would be repeated over again from what I just heard that must happen at least 10 times during this reading. But I feel like the story still stands up.

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Living Without Life

“He didn’t believe a word of it; on the other hand, it was a form of insurance which could not be safely neglected, in case there might be something in it after all.”

“He” is that man of property, Soames Forsyte. “It” is the funeral service for his uncle Timothy, the last of the generation with which this saga began two books ago. The loss—or rather, the near-complete-absence—of any received, orthodox faith is one of the many strands that make these books such an engaging listen. Wealth, property, social standing, strict observance of the outward forms in society and religion, are the meat of this social satire.

But don’t imagine a mere pillorying of fashionable respectability. There’s that of course, but much more than satire is going on here, otherwise I wouldn't be feeling so much sorrow and pity. This poor family: whether conventional or unconventional each member is, in the end, a Forsyte, existing on the material plane of property and beauty and who, though they may have occasional intimations of immortality (see above), conceive of death as simply the end, and immortality as the passing on of property and beauty to the next generation.

It gives the books an oppressive, claustrophobic atmosphere, as if one were living in a room with too low a ceiling. Yet still one listens all the way to the end because one likes—or at least is interested in, intrigued by—these people. We are all, in our own ways, Forsytes, and as Galsworthy observes in his preface, there are worse things to be. Hence those feelings of sorrow and pity for their stunted world view, a world view perhaps overcome by but two of the characters, and only at the very end.

It goes without saying that David Case (Frederick Davidson) is the perfect vehicle for the tone and cadence of Galsworthy’s prose.

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    5 out of 5 stars
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TRAGIC

This is the third book in the ongoing saga of the Forsyte family which focuses on a new generation of Forsytes along with some old and unfinished business of the prior generation. Very well written with superb narration, although could have used a better editing job on this one as, at times, passages were repeated in tandem, which was odd!

This is a tragic story on several levels, especially for the character of Soames whose long suffering folly, for some reason, touches me deeply and just breaks my tender heart….😔.

Very, very good series, and I plan to continue on with the next.

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Very enjoyable

This is a wonderful story and narration, spoiled only by poor editing. Such a shame because it is otherwise so good.

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