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Ein Jahr voller Märchen: Der Hörbuch-Kalender: 4. Woche des Jahres, Januar (Teil 4/52)
Ein Hörbuch-Jahreskalender voller Märchen! Woche für Woche sieben Märchen aus aller Welt! Woche 4: Der fliegende Koffer, Die Nixe im Teich, Der arme Student, Von dem Burschen, der zum Nordwind ging und das Mehl zurückforderte, Die Riesin in dem Steinboote, Der schwarze Stein von Arddu, Der Königssohn und der Bär.
Hans Christian Andersen, The Brothers Grimm (Author), Jürgen Fritsche (Narrator)
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Yvon, jeune mousse, sauve un jeune chiot Terre-Neuve des mains de jeunes garçons lors d'une escale . Capitaine, nom donné au chien, est fidèle à son jeune maitre et se fait remarquer par son instinct de sauveteur…
Mme De Nanteuil (Author), Emmanuelle Lemée (Narrator)
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The Wishing Star & The North Pole Picnic
THE WISHING STAR. Katy, Cassie and Zia venture into outer space. With the help of Katy's cat Thunder, they navigate their way to the Wishing Star. But as they prepare to make their wishes, the friends see the destruction happening back home, and realise they have a greater mission: to save the Earth! THE NORTH POLE. Winter has arrived, and the girls decide to picnic at the North Pole. But before they can enjoy snowflake-shaped sandwiches and mountains of ice cream, they must first win the trust of the Arctic Queen, and discover why the North Pole is melting.
Emma Beswetherick (Author), Hayley Wareham (Narrator)
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Nineteenth-century Tibet was an unknown entity, a complete geographical mystery to the West. Where did its capital city Lhasa lie? Which rivers, lakes and mountains stretched across this land? Where were its fabled monasteries and legendary goldfields? And did the magical flying lamas actually exist? It was next to impossible for a white man to enter this rigorously guarded territory. And so was chosen an intrepid Indian explorer from the mountains of Kumaon-Nain Singh Rawat. Trekking across this country, he risked life and limb and donned innumerable clever disguises as he surveyed the vast expanses and identified countless villages, cities and people. From putting Lhasa accurately on the world map to earning the title of Pundit, his eventful and often arduous travels led to his name being permanently engraved in the annals of Indian exploration. Based on his actual diaries, this gripping narrative is also a tribute to the indomitable spirit of this fascinating man, who rose from being an impoverished village schoolteacher to a legendary hero.
Deepa Agarwal (Author), Aishwarya Singh (Narrator)
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Mik Murdoch: Crisis of Conscience
Mik Murdoch has done a lot in his short career as a superhero. He’s discovered the Cave of Wonders, battled giant glowing turkeys, and rescued a legendary creature. So when mysterious snow circles start appearing in the fields around Cranberry Flats, it looks like it’ll be business as usual. Except a voice in his dreams is warning him to ignore the circles. And when disaster strikes, Mik is faced with a number of tough choices - choices that make him begin to doubt himself and his decisions. Is he making things better or worse for his town? Is he solving the mysteries around him, or is he simply running around, putting everyone at risk? Will the voices end up helping him or haunting him? What is a boy superhero to do?
Michell Plested (Author), Kevin Earlywine (Narrator)
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This stunning audiobook from the survival story master, set along a rugged coastline centuries ago, does for the ocean what Hatchet does for the woods, as it relates the story of a young person’s battle to stay alive against the odds, where the high seas meet a coastal wilderness. When a deadly plague reaches the small fish camp where he lives, an orphan named Leif is forced to take to the water in a cedar canoe. He flees northward, following a wild, fjord-riven shore, navigating from one danger to the next, unsure of his destination. But the deeper into his journey he paddles, the closer he comes to his truest self as he connects to “the heartbeat of the ocean . . . the pulse of the sea.” With hints of Nordic mythology and an irresistible narrative pull, Northwind is Gary Paulsen at his captivating, adventuresome best. A Macmillan Audio production from Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
Gary Paulsen (Author), Jd Jackson (Narrator)
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Für sein zweites Abenteuer bekommt Ulfie eine Gummisocke von Sebastian geschenkt. Anschließend reist er mit Hilfe der Ufafamaschi auf ein Piratenschiff. Mit Captain Oskar Ohnebart und Vic findet Ulfie schnell neue Freunde. Aber was hat es mit dem mürrischen Schiffsmaat Edward auf sich? Als ein Sturm die Crew trennt, überschlagen sich die Ereignisse. Werden die Freunde den Piratenschatz finden? Und was haben Schätze im Himmel damit zu tun? Eine spannende Geschichte erwartet euch! Mit den biblischen Geschichten: 'Der Schatz im Acker' und 'Sammelt euch Schätze im Himmel'.
Sebastian Rochlitzer (Author), Philipp Schepmann, Sebastian Rochlitzer (Narrator)
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Shipping Clerk by William Morrison - If Ollie knew the work he was doing, he would have resigned—if resigning were possible! If there had ever been a time when Ollie Keith hadn't been hungry, it was so far in the past that he couldn't remember it. He was hungry now as he walked through the alley, his eyes shifting lusterlessly from one heap of rubbish to the next. He was hungry through and through, all one hundred and forty pounds of him, the flesh distributed so gauntly over his tall frame that in spots it seemed about to wear through, as his clothes had. That it hadn't done so in forty-two years sometimes struck Ollie as in the nature of a miracle. He worked for a junk collector and he was unsuccessful in his present job, as he had been at everything else. Ollie had followed the first part of the rags-to-riches formula with classic exactness. He had been born to rags, and then, as if that hadn't been enough, his parents had died, and he had been left an orphan. He should have gone to the big city, found a job in the rich merchant's counting house, and saved the pretty daughter, acquiring her and her fortune in the process. It hadn't worked out that way. In the orphanage where he had spent so many unhappy years, both his food and his education had been skimped. He had later been hired out to a farmer, but he hadn't been strong enough for farm labor, and he had been sent back. His life since then had followed an unhappy pattern. Lacking strength and skill, he had been unable to find and hold a good job. Without a good job, he had been unable to pay for the food and medical care, and for the training he would have needed to acquire strength and skill. Once, in the search for food and training, he had offered himself to the Army, but the doctors who examined him had quickly turned thumbs down, and the Army had rejected him with contempt. They wanted better human material than that.
William Morrison (Author), Scott Miller (Narrator)
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The Plagiarist From Rigel IV by Evan Hunter - Writing stories was hard work—unless Fred had a typewriter like 'Reggie' that could write by itself! Nonsense? Fred agreed until he met— THE PLAGIARIST FROM RIGEL IV I bought the typewriter in a pawn shop on Third Avenue. The pawn shop proprietor was a balding old man with a walrus mustache. 'How much?' I asked him. 'Five dollars,' he said casually. I glanced at him skeptically. The machine was a Remington Noiseless, with italics, probably worth a little over a hundred new, and it couldn't have been more than a year or two old. 'How much?' I asked. 'Five dollars, is what I said. Five.' He held up the fingers of his widespread hand. 'Five. One-two-three....' 'What's wrong with it?' I asked suspiciously. The old man shrugged. 'Something has to be wrong with it? Listen, young man, don't look a gift horse in the mouth.' 'How come it's so cheap?' The old man sighed deeply. 'You try to do a favor, you get all kinds of questions. Would you feel happier if I charged you fifty-five dollars?' 'I wouldn't pay fifty-five dollars. I haven't got that much money.' 'Have you got five dollars? Can you pay that much?' 'Yes. But....' 'All right, take the machine. A case goes with it. Believe me, young man, this is a bargain.' 'Five dollars?' I asked again. 'Five dollars. You want it? Yes or no? I got other things to do.' 'I'll take it.' The old man smiled. 'Good, you'll never regret it.' He slid the machine off the counter and put it into its case. He snapped the case shut then, locked it, and handed me the two keys.
Evan Hunter (Author), Scott Miller (Narrator)
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Task of Kayin by William Morrison - From out beyond the second sun he came; a fugitive from a dead and sterile world ... seeking solace, friends, a home, on Earth—a planet of even greater terrors. The sensation of which he was most conscious was that of loneliness. He was no longer very much afraid, and sometimes he even thought that his enemies back home were no longer hunting for him. But in the midst of these strange creatures he learned that there was one thing worse than open hostility, and that was indifference. They had no more interest in him than they had in each other, and even though their indifference increased his own chances for safety, it was a chilling thing none the less. He knew that though they were like him superficially, they were intensely different within. He stood at a street corner trying to fathom the difference, while the crowds surged about him, buffeting him from side to side. They seemed to have no idea of personal dignity. He still understood their language only imperfectly, and spoke it with difficulty, but he had learned, in a primitive way, to read their faces, and during this time of day, at least, their faces told of a strain and fear all their own, of an uncertainty even greater than his. They were going home from work, and they were afraid of countless trifles—that something unpleasant might happen, that they might not get seats on their conveyances, that bad news might greet them when they arrived. He stared with fascination at a heap of newspapers spread out on the corner stand. He could guess the purpose of these layers of white sheets covered with black or red symbols, but he could not yet interpret them, and he had no idea whether any one had seen or reported his ship. It was almost certain that some one had observed a shooting star, but the chances were very much against any observation having been made of the star’s slow, dark drift to earth.
William Morrison (Author), Scott Miller (Narrator)
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Pariah by Milton Lesser - Harry spent three years in space waiting to get home to Earth—and his family. They were waiting for him too—that is, for his corpse... Captain Greene shook his shaggy head and studied Allerton with patient eyes. 'You're making a mistake,' he said. 'You'll be back.' The inside of the spaceship was quiet now, not with the silence of the tomb, but with the silence of barely inaudible echoes as if Allerton might still be able to hear the crew clomping about the companionways on metal-shod feet if only he knew how to listen. He buried the notion under the sweet anticipation of homecoming and said, 'I don't think so, Captain. This is what I want, right here.' He tapped the comforting bulk of his wallet, bulging the metallic cloth of his tunic. He was a gaunt, comical figure of a man, so long and lean that he stooped slightly at the waist and again at the shoulders, with a long, down-tipped nose which almost seemed to meet the thin-lipped mouth as he spoke. 'What about you, Captain?' he said. He was still savoring the joy of his own return, letting it build up inside him like a slow fire fanned by barely enough air to keep it kindled. He hardly cared whether Captain Greene disembarked or not, but the captain's unexpected lack of enthusiasm was a splendid counter-point for his own emotions and he wanted to wring every last drop of joy from his homecoming. 'All the men are gone,' he went on. 'This is Earth, Captain.' 'I don't leave the ship much these days, Allerton. I've got to complete the log, you know, then do a little advance astronauting for the trip out. Anyway, none of the others are spacemen, Allerton. An old spacedog like me can smell 'em a mile away—the real ones. You've got the makings, all right.'
Milton Lesser (Author), Scott Miller (Narrator)
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Lost Sci-Fi Books 26 thru 30 - Five Lost Sci-Fi Short Stories from the 1940s, 50s and 60sBeyond The Door by Philip K. Dick - Larry Thomas bought a cuckoo clock for his wife—without knowing the price he would have to pay. Shipping Clerk by William Morrison - If Ollie knew the work he was doing, he would have resigned—if resigning were possible! Spoken For by William Morrison - He was lost—anyone could see that—but she had no idea how entirely lost he was nor why! Pariah by Milton Lesser - Harry spent three years in space waiting to get home to Earth—and his family. They were waiting for him too—that is, for his corpse... The Plagiarist From Rigel IV by Evan Hunter - Writing stories was hard work—unless Fred had a typewriter like 'Reggie' that could write by itself! Nonsense? Fred agreed until he met— THE PLAGIARIST FROM RIGEL IV
Evan Hunter, Milton Lesser, Philip K. Dick, William Morrison (Author), Scott Miller (Narrator)
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