Just got introduced to this book by one quote “ i loved her against reason, against promise, against peace, against hope, against happiness, against all discouragement that could be” and i needed more.
So startled to read these comments. I read this book by choice, many years ago, loved it, and followed by reading all of Dickens. I'm now listening to it because it's a beloved book that I haven't read for a long time. You people not reading it because it was assigned? Try it! It's awesome.
I agree. I o oy stopped reading for attention troubles and being too busy. Now I came across this and it's great. Many people would rather play an app than read sadly. I have not seen someone read a book or ebook for months on my train.
Really? I wish i liked it but i think its really boring anyways gotta read it cuz i dont wanna fail english Also i do like reading just not this cuz the wierd language
i read an abridged version of this in elementary school, quickly became one of my favorite pieces of literature! i’ve read several abridged versions but now i’m finally gonna go with the full version. this is gonna be my sleep video for a bit. thank you :)
Beautifully narrated, thank you. I tried to read this book when I was young and couldn't get on with it. Decided to have another go but have found i was right all those years ago; Great Expectations is boring AF. I pity all you who have to write a paper in it🙄
If you want to learn? This is how I taught my self. I took a book with big words and looked them up in a dictionary every time I came across one I didn't know. I read and reread every word and paragraph until I comprehended it. First book took me about two weeks reading 12 hours a day. I was at a collage reading level in six months. Where there's a will there is a way. I'm also dyslexic. I'm listening to this cause I want to here the story and I don't have a copy. Keep trying. You can do it!
@@sirhenrybaskerville6770 It was a long long time ago I read the story. What I remember is a spirit hound that glowed at night and in the mist of the marshes. I m not sure but I think I remember it being a great Dane breed. That's all I remember. I read it over 27 years ago.
currently on chapter 4, will update this comment! btw, watch on 1.25 speed or even 1.5 for a fast listening that still makes sense! Update: on chapter 5 Update: 2:32:04 Update: 4:08:49, story was a bit confusing because I think I put the time wrong and accidentally skipped something :( Update: 5:43:47, I think I caught up! :) Update: Chapter 22! Almost done with part 1! Update: 6:43:16! Woo! Update: 7:07:32 didn’t listen much today Update: Chapter 30! Almost done with part one, 18 more minutes, I’m guessing one more chapter? Anyways, I’ve kind of been multitasking while listening so... oops I guess? I guess I understand the basics and the setting of this story so that’s good enough. Plus, I’m not reading this for school so it’s all good. I think. Aah. :0 Update again: 2 more minutes! I’m kind of just writing this while listening so that’s why it’s so long. END OF CHAPTER 30- ok I think part 1 is over, catch my comment in part 2! have a good day everyone!
I can't even understand any of this, but I have to listen to it as I have to read this book and write a book report ,as it is my holiday homework.😭😭😭😭😭😭 Why, why😭😭😭😭
@@matthewjenkins8013 I love being able to read and listen at the same time. My eyes don't have to work quite so hard but i can see the words that might not be entirely intelligible to my aging ears. For example when they were in the park and Pip wondered who had shot all those horses. And then he said he wished Joe could have done it. And I'm thinking "WHAT?!!! Why would he want Joe to shoot horses?" And then I thought, "Oh yeah. Joe is a blacksmith. He shoes horses. He would have SHOD the horses." It would have been much more efficient if I could could just have seen the word from the start.
Just thought I would say Mr Peter Keeble, this is an excellent reading of the Dickens classic :) Really enjoying it, its a toss up for me between this and Bleak House in the number one spot for Dickens best work! I particularly like your Mr Pumblechook...that tone is exactly what I would have envisaged for the character...and as he's so comparatively minor he rarely gets a look in, in most adaptations, but of course in his engineering of a place for Pip at Ms Haversham's he is vital to the plot of the story and Pip heaps such vitriol on him (deservedly) I always felt it a shame that I have seen so few adaptations where we get to hear Pips scorn of the pompous old poser! Your Ms Haversham is also pretty good too! Anyway, keep up the good work and thank you
Nick Mamo If you can recognise the word 'seem' is spelt with an 'm' and not an 'n' as you spealt it in 'seen instead of 'seem'. Then you likely have not dyslexia as dyslexia is about not having the ability to recognize simple spelling mistakes.
Chapter I * My father's family name being Pirrip, and my Christian name Philip, my infant tongue could make of both names nothing longer or more explicit than Pip. So, I called myself Pip, and came to be called Pip. I give Pirrip as my father's family name, on the authority of his tombstone and my sister,-Mrs. Joe Gargery, who married the blacksmith. As I never saw my father or my mother, and never saw any likeness of either of them (for their days were long before the days of photographs), my first fancies regarding what they were like were unreasonably derived from their tombstones. The shape of the letters on my father's, gave me an odd idea that he was a square, stout, dark man, with curly black hair. From the character and turn of the inscription, "Also Georgiana Wife of the Above," I drew a childish conclusion that my mother was freckled and sickly. To five little stone lozenges, each about a foot and a half long, which were arranged in a neat row beside their grave, and were sacred to the memory of five little brothers of mine,-who gave up trying to get a living, exceedingly early in that universal struggle,-I am indebted for a belief I religiously entertained that they had all been born on their backs with their hands in their trousers-pockets, and had never taken them out in this state of existence. Ours was the marsh country, down by the river, within, as the river wound, twenty miles of the sea. My first most vivid and broad impression of the identity of things seems to me to have been gained on a memorable raw afternoon towards evening. At such a time I found out for certain that this bleak place overgrown with nettles was the churchyard; and that Philip Pirrip, late of this parish, and also Georgiana wife of the above, were dead and buried; and that Alexander, Bartholomew, Abraham, Tobias, and Roger, infant children of the aforesaid, were also dead and buried; and that the dark flat wilderness beyond the churchyard, intersected with dikes and mounds and gates, with scattered cattle feeding on it, was the marshes; and that the low leaden line beyond was the river; and that the distant savagelair from which the wind was rushing was the sea; and that the small bundle of shivers growing afraid of it all and beginning to cry, was Pip. "Hold your noise!" cried a terrible voice, as a man started up from among the graves at the side of the church porch. "Keep still, you little devil, or I'll cut your throat!" A fearful man, all in coarse gray, with a great iron on his leg. A man with no hat, and with broken shoes, and with an old rag tied round his head.
People here speeding up the audio but im slowing it down because im also reading the book out loud to memorise it and im dysslexic and a slow reader 😭 its the hard knock life
Reason I’m here- In English I have a TEST TOMORROW on the first 20 chapters of GE. And it gets better, I didn’t read any of it yet, cause well it’s rly BORING. So now I’m struggling the night before to at least get some information on the book. RIP ME AND MY GRADE
Lovely reading of this. Not a fan of Libre Vox recordings but this is very good. I recently visited St James Churchyard at Cooling in Kent,. So it’s really nice to hear the unabridged first chapters detailing the lonely gloom of the north Kent marshes! Well done!
I suspect the forge must be around the middle of st Mary’s marshes , now st Mary’s Island.its exactly 4 miles from Rochester high street and would have been fairly close to the prison hulks next to Chatham dockyard.and also where they filmed parts of the 1946 John mills classic
All Chapters:
Chapter 1: 00:00:00
Chapter 2: 00:11:30
Chapter 3: 00:32:13
chapter 4: 00:43:03
chapter 5: 01:03:48
chapter 6: 01:26:47
chapter 7: 01:31:16
chapter 8: 01:54:26
chapter 9: 02:23:02
chapter 10: 02:39:06
chapter 11: 02:54:19
chapter 12: 03:24:24
chapter 13: 03:37:31
chapter 14: 03:55:02
Chapter 15: 4:00:10
Chapter 16: 4:25:01
Chapter 17: 4:36:48
Chapter 18: 4:55:37
Chapter 19: 5:25:26
Chapter 20: 5:58:20
Chapter 21: 6:16:15
Chapter 22: 6:26:25
Chapter 23: 6:54:41
Chapter 24: 7:13:16
Chapter 25: 7:26:01
Chapter 26: 7:42:14
Chapter 27: 7:58:22
Chapter 28: 8:16:00
Chapter 29: 8:29:35
Chapter 30: 8:58:26
Ryan The Tech Man life saver
Ryan The Tech Man, thank you for all the times of the chapters from the audiobook listed down :)
bless your soul
I guess you passed our "Great Expectations", (Cue Cringey British Laugh) Oh hahahahaha, the bloody crosser tosser made another lovely joke, amirite.
Ryan The Tech Man many thanx
My favorite part is the narrator saying this is in the public domain with a real rough voice like he is mad
😂😂
😂
i love that we’re all unified in procrastination
I’m reading this before the semester starts aye aye
Matthew Jenkins lol why u gotta be better than everyone like that!!😂😂
lmao i’m supposed to be on chapter 40 but i’m on 28 👁
Discipline = Freedom
Yep.
89 dislikes are people who failed their Literature and comp tests
Me for sure :v
😂😂
Crappy sound gets you thumbs down on an audio book...
Thanks for posting this, this is really great for my fellow procrastinators out there who wait 1 day till a book report is due.
right
Lol you caught me on that one.
Thats me rn still deciding if i should just find a summary in schmoop
Who told you that?
By Tommorow night I have to read half the book. I haven’t started
English Test in a week = playback speed 2x
Sleeperr Chara OMG SAME! Imma fail
I’ve gotten so used to it that normal speed sounds slow asf
I’ve got it tomorrow and I’m on chapter 23
@@proxgaming6148 it wont let me speed it up
Phoenix The Producer you click the 3 dots and select playback speed and switch it to 2x
Just got introduced to this book by one quote “ i loved her against reason, against promise, against peace, against hope, against happiness, against all discouragement that could be” and i needed more.
Considering the only other option is a bloke with a south carolina accent, thank you so much
Best line (Ask no questions and you will be told no lies)
Yayyyy...... 6 hours of this so I won’t fail my test
Charles Dickens is one of the most eloquent writers of all time. He's so descriptive.
too descriptive
@@espynwisniewski9013 welcome to Victorian prose
Marvelous, superior British voice to add great realism to the book - and certainly the story!
So startled to read these comments. I read this book by choice, many years ago, loved it, and followed by reading all of Dickens. I'm now listening to it because it's a beloved book that I haven't read for a long time. You people not reading it because it was assigned? Try it! It's awesome.
All I got from this book is that I'm very proud to be an American.
@@PalashaGabarra I'm very proud to be a literate adult.
You are so right! This was one of the last Dickens books I read , and perhaps my favorite!
I agree. I o oy stopped reading for attention troubles and being too busy. Now I came across this and it's great. Many people would rather play an app than read sadly. I have not seen someone read a book or ebook for months on my train.
Really? I wish i liked it but i think its really boring anyways gotta read it cuz i dont wanna fail english
Also i do like reading just not this cuz the wierd language
i read an abridged version of this in elementary school, quickly became one of my favorite pieces of literature! i’ve read several abridged versions but now i’m finally gonna go with the full version. this is gonna be my sleep video for a bit. thank you :)
Beautifully narrated, thank you. I tried to read this book when I was young and couldn't get on with it. Decided to have another go but have found i was right all those years ago; Great Expectations is boring AF. I pity all you who have to write a paper in it🙄
Dickens was genius, so eloquent
And an excellent reading! Thank you!
I'm actually listening to this just for fun. This is the first time I'm reading or listening to any of Dickens' novels and I'm really enjoying it. :-)
Check out a christmas carol, the audiobook is pretty good
Yea same here
Once you love one Dickens novel, you will probably love them all. I recommend David Copperfield, which is my favorite. Check out Bleak House too.
imagine hahah
You do you boo 🩷
School is my reason
ACEisSt SAME
Sad
My favourite Dickens work
"What's up I'm Jared I'm 19 and I never learned how to read"
If you want to learn? This is how I taught my self. I took a book with big words and looked them up in a dictionary every time I came across one I didn't know. I read and reread every word and paragraph until I comprehended it. First book took me about two weeks reading 12 hours a day. I was at a collage reading level in six months. Where there's a will there is a way. I'm also dyslexic. I'm listening to this cause I want to here the story and I don't have a copy. Keep trying. You can do it!
I started with a book of a collection of Sherlock Holmes story. The Baskerville hound was a really good story.
@@jenniferbrumback9195 soo, you've read about my family hound. can you tell me something about it. Tomorrow I'm departing to Devonshire from London.
@@sirhenrybaskerville6770 It was a long long time ago I read the story. What I remember is a spirit hound that glowed at night and in the mist of the marshes. I m not sure but I think I remember it being a great Dane breed. That's all I remember. I read it over 27 years ago.
@@sirhenrybaskerville6770 you have a lovely heratige rich in culture. Have fun on your holiday!
Almost blind so I'm loving these
i'm 23 and this is my 2nd reading of great expectations, first read the book in 2011. think i'm enjoying it more now i'm an adult.
Grow up
Kate Hollyoake has
we
In what ways?
Read it again when you're 70. It's even better.
Who all is here for school?
I'm here
I'm here 🤗😋
I’m here
im here...
to fast forward this to x2 speed so I can finish this book in half of the time of the two part audiobook
Meh😊
1:31:12 very start of chapter 7: sorry for spamming comments with bookmarks 😬
thank you, I was looking for chapter 7!
Thx
This helps me cuz I have trouble focusing
“This libravox recoding is in the public domain” - Charles Dickens
🤣🤣👍👍
Chapter 5: 1:03:48
Chapter 6: 1:26:47
Chapter 7: 1:31:16
Chapter 8: 1:54:25
Chapter 9: 2:23:02
Chapter 10: 2:39:07
Chapter 11: 2:54:18
Chapter 12: 3:24:24
Chapter 13: 3:37:30
Chapter 14: 3:55:02
-
Chapter 18: 4:55:38
Chapter 19: 5:25:26
The accent and reading of the book is perfect!
Somehow im here because I want to hear the actual book.
I’m one paragraph in and have no clue what I’m reading, lord help me hahaha
It's a book about a yound child named Pirrip who can only pronounce his own name as Pip. If he is let to live you may read more of him in chapter two.
I prefer this narrator. Much more authentic. You can feel the meaning in the words.
Thank you for saving my English grade
Yooooo we love last minute AP Lit panic reading
Whenever I need to read an old book this is the channel
currently on chapter 4, will update this comment! btw, watch on 1.25 speed or even 1.5 for a fast listening that still makes sense!
Update: on chapter 5
Update: 2:32:04
Update: 4:08:49, story was a bit confusing because I think I put the time wrong and accidentally skipped something :(
Update: 5:43:47, I think I caught up! :)
Update: Chapter 22! Almost done with part 1!
Update: 6:43:16! Woo!
Update: 7:07:32 didn’t listen much today
Update: Chapter 30! Almost done with part one, 18 more minutes, I’m guessing one more chapter? Anyways, I’ve kind of been multitasking while listening so... oops I guess? I guess I understand the basics and the setting of this story so that’s good enough. Plus, I’m not reading this for school so it’s all good. I think. Aah. :0
Update again: 2 more minutes! I’m kind of just writing this while listening so that’s why it’s so long.
END OF CHAPTER 30-
ok I think part 1 is over, catch my comment in part 2! have a good day everyone!
What a great narration! Thanks a lot.
I read this book along time ago I’m enjoying the audio
You saved me from the burden of reading this book for my exams. Thank you.
😂
Quotes
3:45:20
8:39:28
Bookmark 4:04:17
Starting off my new year with some Great Expectations! (2020)
no fear the corona is here
I guess your expectations just... Well they weren't what you thought they would be 😅😂
I wouldn’t have great expectations for 2020!!
I can't even understand any of this, but I have to listen to it as I have to read this book and write a book report ,as it is my holiday homework.😭😭😭😭😭😭 Why, why😭😭😭😭
Best narration ever
9 HOURS FOR 30 CHAPTERS??? welp the 2x speed button is my friend again
sparknotes is the only way i’m understanding this book
Try listening and reading at the same time! It’s my new favorite way to read!! Helps put you in the moment of the book
@@matthewjenkins8013 I love being able to read and listen at the same time. My eyes don't have to work quite so hard but i can see the words that might not be entirely intelligible to my aging ears. For example when they were in the park and Pip wondered who had shot all those horses. And then he said he wished Joe could have done it. And I'm thinking "WHAT?!!! Why would he want Joe to shoot horses?" And then I thought, "Oh yeah. Joe is a blacksmith. He shoes horses. He would have SHOD the horses." It would have been much more efficient if I could could just have seen the word from the start.
Chapter nine: 2:22:48
Chapter eleven: 2:54:20
Chapter twelve: 3:24:15
Chapter thirteen 3:37:26
It’s wonderful
Appreciate interpretation & your time.
Great narration thanks for posting this
I'm listening to this entire thing because I didn't read the book for my lit class 4 years ago and I felt bad for not putting the work in.
Magnificent vocal characterisation thx narrator a real master piece
Just thought I would say Mr Peter Keeble, this is an excellent reading of the Dickens classic :) Really enjoying it, its a toss up for me between this and Bleak House in the number one spot for Dickens best work! I particularly like your Mr Pumblechook...that tone is exactly what I would have envisaged for the character...and as he's so comparatively minor he rarely gets a look in, in most adaptations, but of course in his engineering of a place for Pip at Ms Haversham's he is vital to the plot of the story and Pip heaps such vitriol on him (deservedly) I always felt it a shame that I have seen so few adaptations where we get to hear Pips scorn of the pompous old poser! Your Ms Haversham is also pretty good too! Anyway, keep up the good work and thank you
This is great, thank you I have this book for my a level and I need this audiobook seens I have disleksia.
stfu
+Andre Coleman BAHAHAH
Nick Mamo same
Nick Mamo
If you can recognise the word 'seem' is spelt with an 'm' and not an 'n' as you spealt it in 'seen instead of 'seem'. Then you likely have not dyslexia as dyslexia is about not having the ability to recognize simple spelling mistakes.
@@MikeGreenwood51 he ment the word “since”
I'm a simple guy who loves to read recreationally, thank fuck I'll already know the story before I have to take an exam on it
Chapter 3: 32:20
chapter 4: 43:00
Chapter 15: 4:00:10
Chapter 19: 5:25:37
Excellent reading. I really enjoyed this!
Love this💚thanks
Greatest reading ever!
I didn’t even know we read this in English I just been reading this for no reason
00:32:16 chap. 3
00:43:04 chap. 4
01:03:49 chap. 5
01:26:48 chap. 6
Chapter I
*
My father's family name being Pirrip, and my Christian name Philip, my infant tongue could make of both names nothing longer or more explicit than Pip. So, I called myself Pip, and came to be called Pip.
I give Pirrip as my father's family name, on the authority of his tombstone and my sister,-Mrs. Joe Gargery, who married the blacksmith. As I never saw my father or my mother, and never saw any likeness of either of them (for their days were long before the days of photographs), my first fancies regarding what they were like were unreasonably derived from their tombstones. The shape of the letters on my father's, gave me an odd idea that he was a square, stout, dark man, with curly black hair. From the character and turn of the inscription, "Also Georgiana Wife of the Above," I drew a childish conclusion that my mother was freckled and sickly. To five little stone lozenges, each about a foot and a half long, which were arranged in a neat row beside their grave, and were sacred to the memory of five little brothers of mine,-who gave up trying to get a living, exceedingly early in that universal struggle,-I am indebted for a belief I religiously entertained that they had all been born on their
backs with their hands in their trousers-pockets, and had never taken them out in this state of existence.
Ours was the marsh country, down by the river, within, as the river wound, twenty miles of the sea. My first most vivid and broad impression of the identity of things seems to me to have been gained on a memorable raw afternoon towards evening. At such a time I found out for certain that this bleak place overgrown with nettles was the churchyard; and that Philip Pirrip, late of this parish, and also Georgiana wife of the above, were dead and buried; and that Alexander, Bartholomew, Abraham, Tobias, and Roger, infant children of the aforesaid, were also dead and buried; and that the dark flat wilderness beyond the churchyard, intersected with dikes and mounds and gates, with scattered cattle feeding on it, was the marshes; and that the low leaden line beyond was the river; and that the distant savagelair from which the wind was rushing was the sea; and that the small bundle of shivers growing afraid of it all and beginning to cry, was Pip.
"Hold your noise!" cried a terrible voice, as a man started up from among the graves at the side of the church porch. "Keep still, you little devil, or I'll cut your throat!"
A fearful man, all in coarse gray, with a great iron on his leg. A man with no hat, and with broken shoes, and with an old rag tied round his head.
People here speeding up the audio but im slowing it down because im also reading the book out loud to memorise it and im dysslexic and a slow reader 😭 its the hard knock life
I feel kinda bad for you bro ngl
Reason I’m here-
In English I have a TEST TOMORROW on the first 20 chapters of GE. And it gets better, I didn’t read any of it yet, cause well it’s rly BORING. So now I’m struggling the night before to at least get some information on the book. RIP ME AND MY GRADE
Just curious. How did you do on the test?
God, I just realized I have to listen for 9 hours 😔😭
Frrr
set the speed of the video to 1.25 and it won't be so slow but you can still understand it
how
Im using 1.5 cuz hes a slow talker in general
rookie numbers, 2x speed or nothing
Haha you novices, I’m using 3x speed. Impossible I know, but with my reading abilities anything is possible.
I’m here it’s 2021, qué onda? Doing this also for a school assignment
Lovely reading of this. Not a fan of Libre Vox recordings but this is very good.
I recently visited St James Churchyard at Cooling in Kent,. So it’s really nice to hear the unabridged first chapters detailing the lonely gloom of the north Kent marshes! Well done!
Ch. 18 - 4:55:55
Ch. 19 - 5:25:25
Ch. 20 - 5:58:08
Ch. 21 - 6:16:16
Ch. 22 - 6:26:26
Ch. 23 - 6:54:54
Ch. 24 - 7:13:13
Great job!
Thanks alot.. Such a hardwork
I suspect the forge must be around the middle of st Mary’s marshes , now st Mary’s Island.its exactly 4 miles from Rochester high street and would have been fairly close to the prison hulks next to Chatham dockyard.and also where they filmed parts of the 1946 John mills classic
7:26:06 chapter 25
7:42:10 chapter 26
7:58:23 chapter 27
8:16:01 chapter 28
8:29:35 chapter 29
8:58:27 chapter 30
Astonishing!!
What's astonishing?
i have to write a summary on this in 12 hours :)
I just changed schools and they had a summer read book… I’m going back to school in 10 days
For 9th Grade Liberty Students
Chap 7 - 1:31:11
Chap 13 - 3:37:26
Chap 20 - 5:58:09
Chap 27 - 7:58:16
Am I the only one here actually reading the book because I want to read it 😂
Laur T yes
Nah it’s pretty 🔥 but I’m doing it for class
Me. Just because. ❤️
Very good
Who’s here in 2019!
We reading dis book at school and it is so boring so I thought if I listen to the audiobook it will make me fall asleep 👍
1- 00:00:00
2- 00:11:30
chapter3: 00:32:12
chapter 4: 00:43:04
chapter 5: 01:03:50
chapter 6: 01:26:49
chapter 7: 01:31:16
anyone who is reading this for fun and not a book report
👇
Meee
Me too my school exams ain't even till 6 months 😂
Great, thank you!
I’m here...well because of school
4:36:51 Chapter 17 4:55:38 Chapter 18
Book took me 28 and a half hours to finish and write a paper on...
3:55:00 ch 14 start
5:58:00 ch 20 start
7:42:10 ch 26 start
Chapter 15 -
4:00:01
Am I the only one here who is reading Dickens for fun? XDXD
Not at all; I enjoy reading classic literature as well.
I love this novel,but it's too long💔💔💔💔
1:15:58 is my bookmark
1:30:48
1:46:06
2:59:22
6:26:01
8:43:59
1:54:17 Chapter 8
thank you so much XD
3:55:00 chapter 14
i actually like this book
chapter 8: 1:54:16
Bookmark-chapter 17 -- 5 hours 44mins
Chapter 2 11:30
Chapter 3 32:14
Chapter 4 43:04
Chapter 5 1:30:50
THANK YOU
8:15:54 bookmark end of chapter 27
Why is there a 30 sec long silence at the end of the audio???
q u o t e s
8:40:24 (Pip treating Estella like an idol)
1:44:29
1:52:55
2:02:55
2:11:03
2:32:24
chapter 23: 6:26:27
chapter 27: 7:58:23