An Instance of the Fingerpost – Iain Pears Free Audiobook

An Instance of the Fingerpost - Iain Pears Audiobook Free Download
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Author
Iain Pears
Narrator
Gareth Armstrong; Roger May; David McAlister; Christopher Oxford
Size
796.05 MBs
Format
MP3
Bitrate
64 Kbps
Language
English
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Description

Written by Iain Pears
Read by Gareth Armstrong; Roger May; David McAlister; Christopher Oxford
Format: MP3
Bitrate: 64 Kbps
Unabridged

Publisher: Oxford, England : ISIS Audio Books, ℗2011.
Length: 26 hr., 5 min

In 1663 Oxford, a servant girl confesses to a murder. But four witnesses—a medical student, the son of a traitor, a cryptographer, and an archivist—each finger a different culprit…

This massive, delightfully titled literary thriller (it’s a quote from Sir Francis Bacon) is the kind of gamble it’s great to see a publisher taking in these often timid times. The English author, responsible so far for a series of conventional mysteries, has gone back to 17th-century Oxford for an absorbing, macabre tale of murder, politics, faith and betrayal.

Featured in more than incidental roles are such real-life characters as John Locke, Sir Christopher Wren, Robert Boyle, King Charles II and the Earl of Clarendon. The murder by poisoning of Robert Grove, a Fellow of New College, and the subsequent trial and execution for the crime of Sarah Blundy, daughter of a freethinking early Socialist and anti-Royalist, is the heart of the action, which is related in four separate first-person accounts, each the length of a short novel.

There is Marco da Cola, a good-hearted Venetian visitor whose irritable reflections on the English are witty and betray a perfect period ear; Jack Prestcott, a fiery young lawyer devoted to proving that his father, disgraced as a traitor, was himself betrayed; John Wallis, priest, mathematician and cryptographer of genius (also a real character), whose coldly cynical schemes set off a series of dazzlingly complex political maneuvers; and bookish scholar Anthony Wood, a background figure to the rest, but whose consuming love for Sarah makes him ultimately the central actor in the drama.

A critic’s review—Pears’s grasp of the thought of the time, with its scientific zeal curbed always by what seems now like excess religiosity, its ferocious plotting and counterplotting, its struggles for power and position, is sure. Though there are many digressions, most are fascinating, and the book boasts an overall narrative momentum that carries even an ill-informed contemporary reader along.

There will be inevitable comparisons with the work of Umberto Eco, but it seems likely that many of those who have bought Eco’s books will find Pears by far the more accessible.

My thanks to the original uploaded.

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