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The Lovers of the Land Collection: Muir, Roosevelt & Thoreau

Our National Parks; Ranch Life and the Hunting Trail; & Walden

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The Lovers of the Land Collection: Muir, Roosevelt & Thoreau

Written by: John Muir, Theodore Roosevelt, Henry David Thoreau
Narrated by: Museum Audiobooks Cast
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About this listen

Book One: Our National Parks by John Muir is a brilliant guide and introduction to Yosemite and several other magnificent parks by the man who helped to create them through his advocacy for the preservation of wilderness areas. The author provides detailed observations of the animals, birds, glaciers, streams, fountains, sights, scents, and sounds of Yosemite, Yellowstone, Mount Rainier, Sequoia, and other forest reservations of the West. The botanical descriptions are enriched by stories about Muir’s encounters and experiences with bears, hermits, avalanches, earthquakes, bears, hermits, and a mule.

Book Two: Theodore Roosevelt Jr. (1858-1919), 26th president of the United States, from 1901 to 1909, was also a conservationist, naturalist, and writer. From 1884 to 1886 he established his ranch in Dakota Territory, which involved much hardship and toil. Ranch Life and the Hunting Trail – published in 1888 - is the account of his labors and adventures as a cowboy, hunter, herder, and even a stint as a deputy sheriff. The narrative comes alive with engaging descriptions of the inhabitants of the Badlands: the buffalo hunters, Indians, cowboys, and mountain men, as well as the changing environment as the area became more populated in that period.

Book Three: Walden is an account of the time Thoreau lived alone in a cabin in Concord, Massachusetts. He built the cabin, grew and sold vegetables, and contemplated consciousness and identity. The theme is simple living in natural surroundings, and in essence, the work may be seen as a declaration of independence, a social experiment, quest of spiritual discovery, and a self-reliance guide.

Public Domain (P)2021 Museum Audiobooks
Classics
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A third worth it

Fantastic writing, there is no doubt. Where the subject matter is spectacular, the production is sub-par.

Did anyone at Audible even listen to this? Muir’s narrator was tolerable but the fact no one editted out all his stutters, and repeats and errors, and the fact it happens nearly every 5 minutes made it too distracting to listen to. I thought my Bluetooth was skipping until I realised he’d repeat a previous line, or mess up a word, and immediately start back again to get it right. I couldn’t listen to 10 hours of that.

Roosevelt’s third was tolerable but the narrator was clearly having a difficult time at parts making it sound like he wasn’t just reading. Again, not a great performance and the 8 hours was a bit of a slog. The book itself is unmistakably Rooseveltian and was worthwhile as someone who has been reading much about the man.

Walden was great and was a pleasure to listen to, with good performance and only the occasional missed edit.

Overall, as something billed as a “Museum Audiobooks Cast” I was hoping for better, and perhaps more of a fit. The Narrator for Edmund Morris’s Roosevelt biographies would have done much with the “voice of Teddy”, and why not a Scottish accent for Muir, or perhaps a younger man for Thoreau.

Overall this makes me question the quality of future productions. I’d half consider a refund if not for what I was able to glean from it.

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