The Story of the Inexperienced Ghost
by H G Wells
32 minutes, 11 seconds
Unabridged Fantasy/Horror/SF Story
1902

A classic Victorian ghost tale, framed by Wells's trademark love of mystery, adventure, and scientific philosophizing. Performed by Robert Bethune. Not for sale in the EU.
Categories: 150 cents, 2008 Release, 30-60 minutes, Fantasy, Fiction, Ghosts, H G Wells, SF Story, Short Story, Speculative, Susie Berneis and Robert Bethune (Readers)
This recording will be released under the Creative Commons Non-Commercial Attribution License on August 29, 2013 or after 100,000 purchases, whichever comes first. Read more.
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32 minutes, 11 seconds
Unabridged Fantasy/Horror/SF Story
1902

A classic Victorian ghost tale, framed by Wells's trademark love of mystery, adventure, and scientific philosophizing. Performed by Robert Bethune. Not for sale in the EU.
Categories: 150 cents, 2008 Release, 30-60 minutes, Fantasy, Fiction, Ghosts, H G Wells, SF Story, Short Story, Speculative, Susie Berneis and Robert Bethune (Readers)
Because of internationally diverse copyright laws, this audiobook is only for sale in the United States, Canada, Australia, South Africa, and New Zealand. The text on which this audiobook is based is still protected under copyright in the European Union and many other countries (where pre-1923 copyrights last until 70 years after the author's death) and will remain so protected until 2017.
Herbert George Wells (1866-1946) was a British author often called "The Father of Science Fiction." Even before the 20th century began, his fiction and articles explored invisibility, interstellar travel, time travel, and genetic experimentation. His novel, The War of the Worlds was serialized in the American magazine Cosmopolitan, and later turned into a famous radio drama by Orson Wells.
Freshwater Seas can be found online at freshwaterseas.com. [new window]
This recording will be released under the Creative Commons Non-Commercial Attribution License on August 29, 2013 or after 100,000 purchases, whichever comes first. Read more.
Posted by alex at August 29, 2008 10:38 AM


