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Aldous Huxley - Crome Yellow, Version 2

6 hours 4 minutes
Crome Yellow, Version 2
100%
Speed
00:00 / 07:03
1. Chapter 01
12:53
2. Chapter 02
11:49
3. Chapter 03
11:11
4. Chapter 04
08:58
5. Chapter 05
15:44
6. Chapter 06
09:38
7. Chapter 07
04:32
8. Chapter 08
18:14
9. Chapter 09
06:41
10. Chapter 10
12:26
11. Chapter 11
11:35
12. Chapter 12
32:54
13. Chapter 13
08:10
14. Chapter 14
07:28
15. Chapter 15
06:21
16. Chapter 16
18:40
17. Chapter 17
08:08
18. Chapter 18
31:38
19. Chapter 19
10:41
20. Chapter 20
07:22
21. Chapter 21
17:49
22. Chapter 22
05:37
23. Chapter 23
12:19
24. Chapter 24
11:46
25. Chapter 25
06:05
26. Chapter 26
18:48
27. Chapter 27
10:16
28. Chapter 28
10:41
29. Chapter 29
09:09
30. Chapter 30
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Author
Reader
Length
6 hours 4 minutes
Year
1921
Summary
Fascinating and brilliant at many levels, Huxley's spoof of Lady Ottoline Morrell's famous bohemian gatherings is difficult to categorize. The ironic tone and caricaturish rendering of some characters makes it partly entertaining satire, but intertwined with the irony are a very human love story and much poignant social commentary. Denis Stone (Huxley himself) is a young poet hopelessly enamored of the languid Anne Wimbush, who comes to Priscilla Wimbush's Crome estate for several weeks of intellectual and artistic escape. Along the way of his love affair, he engages in or eavesdrops upon conversations with other guests about the War, about eschatology, about future society, about Sex, about Art, about Love. Several of these dialogues directly foreshadow themes of Huxley's later dystopian masterpiece, Brave New World. Others show a tragic prescience of another great European war on its way, an awareness that future tragedy might attempt to complete the unfinished business of the recent Great War. Huxley's first novel, Crome Yellow is well worth reading in its own right, while containing embryonic forms of so much of Huxley's later intellectual themes. — Summary by Expatriate

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