
Faust: Parts I & II
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Narrated by:
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Philippe Duquenoy
Faust has long been considered one of the most important works of European literature ever published. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe began writing Faust in the 1770s while still a young man, spending most of his adult life on the project. Faust was finally finished almost 50 years later, near the end of his life.
Faust is a philosophical drama full of humor, satire, and tragedy. In Part 1, the demon Mephistopheles makes a bet with God that he can lure Faust from the path of good. Faust is in the middle of a personal crisis when he is visited by the demon. Mephistopheles successfully lures Faust into putting his soul on the line for a chance at true happiness but the deal only leads to tragedy.
In Part 2, the tragedy has faded and Faust now finds himself on a new path of adventure as he strives to redeem himself and is eventually released from his evil pact with the demon.
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Concise
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CAUTION
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Faust is a story that one should cover a couple of times. This was my first pass and I need at least another two to get out of it what I was hoping to. Part I sets the bar really high, and Part II frustrated me at times - but it combines in an epic tale without which Part I would be half-baked.
As for the narration - I think it was expertly done but for something as challenging as Faust, I expected a slightly more diversified reading style - perhaps multiple actors / narrators with different styles for Faust and Mephistopheles at least. I listen to many books at 1.5x or even 2x speed, but Faust is something that should be listened to at 0.75x or perhaps even 0.5x. I needed it slower with more deliberate pauses. There's a lot to take in, a lot to visualise and imagine, a lot to digest and for that the narration was a bit too challenging for me.
english is to german...
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Wonderful Performance
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Simply Spectacular!!
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How can you even attempt to write a "review" of such a universal masterpice?
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Mind-Blowing
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Unorganized presentation
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This is incredible
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As for the reader, I wish he spoke more conversationally than poeticly. The constant bouncing rhythm, though I'm sure the intended way to read the text, made it very hard to listen to and process. His lack of tone change when alternating between different speaking character and narraration also affected its clarity. Maybe if he had taken longer pauses between lines it would have been better.
First part was good, second part a mess
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