Arch of Triumph
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Narrated by:
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Ralph Cosham
About this listen
Forbidden to return to his own country and dodging the everyday dangers of jail and deportation, Ravic manages to hang on, all the while searching for the Nazi who tortured him back in Germany. And though he's given up on the possibility of love, life has a curious way of taking a turn for the romantic, even during the worst of times.
©1945 Erich Maria Remarque, renewed 1972 by Paulette Goddard Remarque (P)2004 Blackstone Audiobooks, published by arrangement with the Estate of Paulette Goddard RemarqueListeners also enjoyed...
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Help is really on the way
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Critic reviews
"A great writer....[Remarque] is a craftsman of unquestionably first rank, a man who can bend his language to his will. Whether he writes of men or of inanimate nature, his touch is sensitive, firm, and sure." (The New York Times Book Review)
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Mary Jago had donated her own bone marrow to save the life of someone she didn’t know. And this generous act led directly to the bitter break-up of her affair with Alistair. For him, it was as though her beauty had been plundered. But the man whose life she had saved would change Mary’s life in a way she could never have imagined.
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Mystery with humor and insight
- By Ida Hagman on 10-02-12
By: Ruth Rendell
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Laughter in the Dark
- By: Vladimir Nabokov
- Narrated by: Luke Daniels
- Length: 5 hrs and 21 mins
- Unabridged
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Albinus, a respectable, middle-aged man and aspiring filmmaker, abandons his wife for a lover half his age: Margot, who wants to become a movie star. When Albinus introduces her to Rex, an American movie producer, disaster ensues. What emerges is an elegantly sardonic and irresistibly ironic novel of desire, deceit, and deception, a curious romance set in the film world of Berlin in the 1930s.
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Death is often the point of life's joke
- By Darwin8u on 05-19-13
By: Vladimir Nabokov
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Ideal
- The Novel and the Play
- By: Ayn Rand
- Narrated by: Christopher Lane, Robin Field
- Length: 7 hrs and 9 mins
- Unabridged
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Originally conceived as a novel but then transformed into a play by Ayn Rand, Ideal is the story of beautiful but tormented actress Kay Gonda. Accused of murder, she is on the run and turns for help to six fans who have written letters to her, each telling her that she represents their ideal - a respectable family man, a far-left activist, a cynical artist, an evangelist, a playboy, and a lost soul.
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Budding Rand
- By Anthony on 07-07-15
By: Ayn Rand
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The Master and Margarita
- By: Mikhail Bulgakov
- Narrated by: Julian Rhind-Tutt
- Length: 8 hrs and 21 mins
- Abridged
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The Master and Margarita is one of the most famous and best-selling Russian novels of the 20th century, despite its surreal environment of talking cats, Satan and mysterious happenings. Naxos AudioBooks presents this careful abridgement of a new translation in an imaginative reading by the charismatic Julian Rhind-Tutt. With War and Peace and Crime and Punishment among the Naxos AudioBooks best-sellers, this too promises to be a front title.
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Very vivid and amazing writing style
- By Sina Beni on 05-04-22
By: Mikhail Bulgakov
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The Great Gatsby
- By: F. Scott Fitzgerald
- Narrated by: Tim Robbins
- Length: 5 hrs and 3 mins
- Unabridged
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Set against a backdrop of jazz music, bootlegging, and lavish parties, The Great Gatsby is the story of Midwesterner Nick Carraway’s curious introduction to the decadent world of his mysterious, wealthy neighbor Jay Gatsby, whose thirst for riches is matched only by his tragic obsession with the beautiful Daisy Buchanan. This dangerously propulsive tale of glitz and glamour continues to be relevant as listeners long for escapist novels—a chance to flee into Gatsby’s famed mansion and lose oneself in the rush of opulence.
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Alive and Wild! I finished it same day.
- By Brea DeMarquee on 08-27-21
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The Bormann Testament
- Paul Chevasse, Book 1
- By: Jack Higgins
- Narrated by: Michael Page
- Length: 4 hrs and 17 mins
- Unabridged
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Special Agent Paul Chavasee is about to start a much-deserved holiday when he is abruptly pulled back to active duty. He knows that if he's being called into action, a job has gone bad - and it's about to get a lot worse. As Hitler's private secretary - and an influential member of the Third Reich - Martin Bormann was one of those rare Nazis who managed to simply disappear at the end of World War II. But the terrible secrets Bormann carried into oblivion are about to be revealed to the world. A manuscript that exposes former Nazis, who are now in hiding, is up for grabs, and there are those in power who have much to lose with its discovery.
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Good but not great
- By Randy P. Borges on 05-01-24
By: Jack Higgins
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Hunters in the Dark
- By: Lawrence Osborne
- Narrated by: Stephen Hogan
- Length: 9 hrs and 55 mins
- Unabridged
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From the novelist the New York Times compares to Paul Bowles, Evelyn Waugh, and Ian McEwan, an evocative new work of literary suspense. Adrift in Cambodia, Robert Grieve - pushing 30 and eager to sidestep a life of quiet desperation as a small-town teacher - decides to go AWOL. As he crosses the border from Thailand, he tests the threshold of a new future.
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Graham Greene
- By Foxhuntingman on 02-26-16
By: Lawrence Osborne
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Hunger
- A Novel
- By: Knut Hamsun
- Narrated by: Kevin Foley
- Length: 6 hrs and 38 mins
- Unabridged
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Knut Hamsun's Hunger, first published in 1890 and hailed as the literary beginning of the 20th century, is a masterpiece of psychologically driven fiction. The story of a struggling artist living on the edge of starvation, the novel portrays the unnamed first-person narrator's descent into paranoia, despair, and madness as hunger overtakes him. As the protagonist loses his grip on reality, Hamsun brilliantly portrays the disturbing and irrational recesses of the human mind through increasingly disjointed and urgent prose.
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Book quite good; wrong narrator
- By Erez on 05-05-11
By: Knut Hamsun
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The Magus
- By: John Fowles
- Narrated by: Nicholas Boulton
- Length: 26 hrs and 19 mins
- Unabridged
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John Fowles’s The Magus was a literary landmark of the 1960s. Nicholas Urfe goes to a Greek island to teach at a private school and becomes enmeshed in curious happenings at the home of a mysterious Greek recluse, Maurice Conchis. Are these events, involving attractive young English sisters, just psychological games, or an elaborate joke, or more? Reality shifts as the story unfolds. The Magus reflected the issues of the 1960s perfectly, and it continues to create tension and concern today.
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One of the best novels that I really think I hate.
- By Darwin8u on 01-29-14
By: John Fowles
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The Street
- By: Ann Petry, Tayari Jones - introduction
- Narrated by: Danielle Deadwyler
- Length: 13 hrs and 25 mins
- Unabridged
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The classic urban tale of a young Black woman's struggle to raise her son alone amid the violence, poverty, and racial dissonance of 1940s Harlem.
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The story is excellent the characters are memorable
- By Alexander on 12-17-24
By: Ann Petry, and others
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After two years at the Russian front, Ernst Graeber finally receives three weeks' leave. But since leaves have been canceled before, he decides not to write his parents, fearing he would just raise their hopes. Then, when Graeber arrives home, he finds his house bombed to ruin and his parents nowhere in sight. Nobody knows if they are dead or alive. As his leave draws to a close, Graeber reaches out to Elisabeth, a childhood friend.
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It’s a lot to take in.
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A hardened young veteran from the First World War, Ludwig now works for a monument company, selling stone markers to the survivors of deceased loved ones. Though ambivalent about his job, he suspects there's more to life than earning a living off other people's misfortunes. A self-professed poet, Ludwig soon senses a growing change in his fatherland, a brutality brought upon it by inflation.
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Excellent book, well read
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With the world slowly sliding into war, it is crucial that enemies of the Reich flee Europe at once. But so many routes are closed, and so much money is needed. Then one night in Lisbon, as a poor young refugee gazes hungrily at a boat bound for America, a stranger approaches him with two tickets and a story to tell.
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A heartwrenching nailbiter WW2 perspective!
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The Good Soldier Svejk
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The Good Soldier Švejk, written shortly after the First World War, is one of the great antiwar satires - and one of the funniest books of the 20th (or any) century. In creating his eponymous hero, Jaroslav Hašek produced an unforgettable character who charms and infuriates and bamboozles his way through the conflagration that tore through the heart of Europe, upending empires and changing social history. It is the closing period of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The assassination at Sarajevo has just occurred and armies are on the march.
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This is real!
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The year is 1928. On the outskirts of a large German city, three young men are earning a thin and precarious living. Fully armed young storm troopers swagger in the streets. Restlessness, poverty, and violence are everywhere. For these three, friendship is the only refuge from the chaos around them. Then the youngest of them falls in love and brings into the group a young woman who will become a comrade as well, as they are all tested in ways they can have never imagined.
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Love and friendship in a dying world.
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It’s a lot to take in.
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Excellent book, well read
- By jan z on 02-02-23
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The Night in Lisbon
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With the world slowly sliding into war, it is crucial that enemies of the Reich flee Europe at once. But so many routes are closed, and so much money is needed. Then one night in Lisbon, as a poor young refugee gazes hungrily at a boat bound for America, a stranger approaches him with two tickets and a story to tell.
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A heartwrenching nailbiter WW2 perspective!
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What listeners say about Arch of Triumph
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- P.J.A.
- 08-20-23
Better than four stars
I was pleasantly surprised by the story and performance. Once I started, i kept listening until it was done.
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- Sammy
- 08-16-20
A masterpiece
The detail the relevance that pertains even through todays world current events makes this book an anatomical blueprint of human nature politics and love. This book is to be enjoyed on multiple levels and the narrator is able to produce the needed ambience for you to loose yourself in it and wait breathlessly for the next step.
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- Artis Filips
- 12-12-20
Classic
Remarque always get you to the bone, bringing up your own pains and heartaches.
"Fata Morgana "
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- Tan
- 12-16-22
Drama in a poetical form
I head a lot of good about the book and gave it a go.
I must say I am not amused. The book is okay, but I can't see what the fuss was about.
Cons:
- the recording isn't a great quality. The narrator is good, but with some headphones you can hear a slight metallic vibration that starts to annoy and is hard to ignore. It's like someone kept an empty coke can next to the microphone and it keeps on "ringing" for half a second after he has completed his sentence.
- I know it's a thing of that time, but it got annoying when everything is described so poetically. Like, everything.
- Quite a slow burn.
Pros:
+ narrator is good. Easy to follow and good diction.
+ considering the slow burn, it's still an okay story. Didn't have to stop half way through.
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- Tarquin
- 12-14-18
Another sad smile from the poet of dispair.
I'd like to correct another reviewer first. Erich Maria Remarque never wrote in English but only in German. The German original is as haunting if not more so than the splendid English translation of the novel by J. Maxwell Brownjohn, who incidentally translated many other of his works. Besides, the protagonist is a German surgeon, but he is certainly not jewish. This is important for a full appreciation of the book.
This novel even surpasses his "Drei Kamaraden" translated as "Three Comrades" in helpless tenderness and poitless loss, the inevitable legacy of every war irrespective of what some power-hungry brute says, be he a dictator or a 'democratically' elected ruffian, specimens of whom are all too common today.
Remarque's break-through came with his "All Quiet on Western Front" in the wake of the Great War, in which Europe committed cultural suicide at an intellectual level, and just over two decades later, started her material end with the rampage initiated by Hitler, the Bolshevik dictator and totally incompetent political nincompoops who led the allied nations.
This story is thus set in a Europe that still remembered her cultural shared heritage where many of her priceless cultural artifacts were still intact but soon to be bombed into smithereens. Human suffering the characters in this book endure seems to look like a last farewell to something priceless, never to reappear, for we forget, and forget.
I have unpardonably overlooked to say anything about the literary merits of this wonderful book. Obviously, its main themes are love and friendship as one often sees in Remarques other works. In spite of the world that's crumbling down around him, Ravic finds both, but the love he finds is not conventional; it is something that illumines the man from within but without what is now called a 'relationship'. This awareness comes to him on a park bench not far from where Joan now lives with her new 'lover' soon after Ravic's return to Paris after his expulsion.
Once he realises this, things happen fast. His successful use of the unexpected chance to kill his tormentor von Hake, he is reconciled with his tortured past, and the moving scence at Joan's death bed, reconciles him to his new notion of love. And so, now in harmony with himself, he could face life with a tinge of optimism without resorting to lies, hence his return to Hotel Internationale and telling the police who he really is. Interplay among these themes and the rapidly collapsing world around him, is iridescent and haunting indeed.
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6 people found this helpful
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- endoduo
- 05-05-19
Repetitive emotion
An important story which almost got lost in the repetitive emotional declarations of the main character and the woman he loved the only way he could, intermittently.
She behaved in a similar fashion which became distracting
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1 person found this helpful
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Overall
- Paul
- 07-20-06
The Western Front 20 Years Later
Remarque is known for the classic All Quiet on the Western Front, which is one of the greatest war stories ever told. I liked this one as much as All Quiet.
A German doctor, Ravitch, escapes from Nazi Germany and is living illegally in Paris. He earns a living as a ghost surgeon for French doctors who are not as talented as he is. One night he meets a woman on the street in Paris, and the story takes off from there.
The characters are the best part of this novel because each one comes across as a distinct individual. You can almost visualize Ravitch, the girl he meets, the French doctor who tries to cheat him and another who defends him, his Russian emigre friend who works as a doorman at a nightclub...each one has a real face. And the narration brings this out.
And, by the way, they drink Calvados throughout the story. It's French apple Brandy with a bit of a kick to it.
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18 people found this helpful
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- Sviat
- 11-26-16
great
just great. That's what I call a masterpiece! Remarque never disappoints one relying on him.
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1 person found this helpful
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- Lisa Dohmen
- 06-06-18
I love this story.......
I've read the book multiple times and fell in love with the characters.... I now love the audiobook. The narrator is wonderful.!!
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2 people found this helpful
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- Oksana Myers
- 01-22-22
Beautiful
Beautiful story telling, beautiful writing, beautiful love story, learning from history. I can read and reread it over and over again
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