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Fylde Audio Theatre

De: a source of Free Audio Books & Plays...
  • Resumen

  • Audio Theatre UK (www.audiotheatre.uk) is a non-commercial, non-profit and ad-free project; providing a small quantity of high quality free audio books and plays for anyone to listen to on their computer, Tablet, Phone, MP3 player etc., or to download and burn to a CD, so that you can listen to them whenever you wish, at absolutely no cost to you. Our books and plays have been recorded by volunteers, which enables us to provide totally free audio books and plays. You don’t even have to register, but please do join the Library so we can advise you of our latest recording. We do have access to over 50,000 eBooks from Project Gutenberg and we are always looking for suggestions so if you would like us to record a specific Project Gutenberg eBook then please do suggest it using the form on the Contacts page on our websitre, we look forward to hearing from you; although we obviously can’t guarantee recording it for you. Or why don’t you become one of our readers? Most parts only take a matter of minutes to record, we come along to your home with a script, a microphone and a tape recorder, and we do the rest; it couldn’t be easier and it is a lot of fun. We generally only use Project Gutenberg eBooks as our source material as all their books are in the public domain and are no longer covered by copyright law, i.e., the copyright has expired. We believe therefore that all our recordings are also no longer covered by copyright law, however because of the nature of the internet, please do check before listening to or downloading or redistributing our audio books and plays that they are out of copyright in your country. Please visit the Project Gutenberg Permissions and License page for information about their rights to use etc.
    © Fylde Audio Theatre 2023
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Episodios
  • Part 2 Half-Past Bedtime by Sir Henry Howarth Bashford (Gwendolen)
    Nov 16 2023
    Living in the same town as Marian there was a little girl called Gwendolen. Marian didn’t know her very well, though they went to the same school and sometimes smiled at each other in church. Her father and mother were always climbing mountains and lecturing about them afterward, so Gwendolen had to live with her aunt, who was very rich and wore a lot of rings. In many ways Gwendolen was a nice girl, but she had an exceptionally large tummy. Some people said that it was her own fault, because she was always sitting about eating marzipan. But some people said that she couldn’t help her tummy, and had to eat a lot to keep it full. There were also people who said that her aunt spoiled her, being so greedy herself and always eating buttered toast…
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    19 m
  • Part 1 Half-Past Bedtime by Sir Henry Howarth Bashford (Mr.Jugg)
    Nov 16 2023
    The name of the town doesn’t really matter; but it was a big town in the middle of the country; and the first of these adventures happened to a little girl whose name was Marian. She was only seven when it happened to her, so that it was rather a young sort of adventure; but the older ones happened later on, and this is the best, perhaps, to begin with. Marian’s house was in a street called Peter Street, because there was a church in it called St Peter’s Church; and some people liked this church, because it had a great spire soaring up into the sky. But Marian’s daddy didn’t like spires, because they were so sharp and so slippery. He liked towers better, because the old church towers, he said, were like little laps, ready to catch God’s blessing. But Marian’s daddy was a queer sort of man, and nobody took much notice of what he said…
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    19 m
  • The Devils often in the Detail by Ben Henderson
    Nov 16 2023
    The story opens with Harry our story teller speaking at his retirement do: Alright, alright, I’ll just say a few words because convention says that I must at a retirement do. As most of you know, at Streatham nick, on the first floor is the Detective Inspector’s office, it’s always been there and many have occupied it and I’ve seen plenty come and go. In 1922, the man that had that office was as straight as an arrow, a bit of a legend, and the story he told me has haunted me, for thirty years. It’s so long ago now, I’m sure the people concerned are no longer with us. His story starts on a cold wintery night in December 1922 and it’s about six o’clock in the evening in the snug lounge of the Volunteer Inn. The pub is on the outskirts of a village called Finsey by the north Norfolk coast. On the back wall between the bar and the door is an old glass fronted display case, in it there is an old flintlock pistol and below it a Victoria Cross medal on a ribbon with a small card citation...
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    1 h y 15 m

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