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Books published by publisher Audio Sommelier

  • The Moors in Spain

    Stanley Lane-Poole, Andrea Giordani, Audio Sommelier

    Audiobook (Audio Sommelier, March 20, 2018)
    The Alhambra in Granada, the Mosque in Cordova - these are some of the magnificent physical remnants of Moorish rule in Spain. Their influence on culture, engineering, and civilization has also remained in ways often unacknowledged. Lane-Poole was the first to publish a scholarly history in English about a non-Christian civilization, making this a ground-breaking work. Written with extensive knowledge, wit, and admiration, Lane-Poole’s The Moors in Spain is not to be missed.
  • The Life of Charlemagne

    Einhard, John Potter, Audio Sommelier

    Audible Audiobook (Audio Sommelier, May 2, 2019)
    Einhard served Charlemagne, king and Holy Roman Emperor, for 23 years. From that experience, combined with his in-depth research, Einhard penned this biography of Charlemagne in the style of Suetonius' Lives of the Caesars. Because he felt indebted to Charlemagne, Einhard wrote in a partial tone, exalting the man's achievements and overlooking certain unflattering details about his life. Despite this, historians regard The Life of Charlemagne as an important historical account that, while not far-reaching, is largely reliable.
  • The Diary of a Forty-Niner

    Chauncey Canfield, Larry G. Jones, Audio Sommelier

    Audible Audiobook (Audio Sommelier, Feb. 16, 2018)
    Not all that glitters is gold, and gold mining was not the simple get-rich-quick scheme many thought it was. The Diary of a Forty-Niner draws readers into the day-to-day life of a prospector during the California Gold Rush. The narrator, Alfred. T. Jackson, leaves home to move out west, dreaming, "I would like to have enough capital so that I would not have to slave from sunrise till dark as I did on dad's farm". This fortune doesn't come easy, though, as his diary documents the rough nights and wild gunfights that were mere occupational hazards of a forty-niner.
  • The Celestial Railroad

    Nathaniel Hawthorne, Andrea Giordani, Audio Sommelier

    Audiobook (Audio Sommelier, April 18, 2018)
    In this allegorical short story, Nathaniel Hawthorne parodies John Bunyan’s famous book, The Pilgrim’s Progress. Rather than take the long and arduous road to the Celestial City, Hawthorne’s narrator hops on the express train to paradise. As he gets closer to his destination, however, he realizes that the clever-talking Mr. Smooth-It-Away may not be who he claims. While a caricature of Bunyan’s original tale, “The Celestial Railroad” ultimately drives home a similar point: there is no easy road to Heaven, so tough it out on the straight and narrow.
  • The Little Match Girl

    Hans Christian Andersen, Elaine Sepani, Audio Sommelier

    Audible Audiobook (Audio Sommelier, April 30, 2019)
    The harsh realities of child poverty come to light in this short story by Danish author Hans Christian Andersen. The tale follows a barefoot girl trying to sell matchsticks on a frigid New Year's Eve. As the night grows colder, she lights the matches for warmth and has visions of her dead grandmother. Feel the cold seep into your bones as you hear this tale that has haunted listeners for over a century.
  • Education and Citizenship

    Mark Twain, Larry G. Jones, Audio Sommelier

    Audiobook (Audio Sommelier, April 30, 2019)
    Mark Twain delivered this speech at the dedication of new buildings at the College of the City of New York. The mayor who preceded him mentioned that good citizenship should take precedence even over education. Twain uses this introduction to transition into a funny discussion of the motto “In God we trust” being stamped into US coins and how this relates to principles of citizenship. “If the cholera or black plague should come to these shores, perhaps the bulk of the nation would pray to be delivered from it,” he remarks, “but the rest would put their trust in the Health Board of the City of New York.”
  • The 14 Points

    Woodrow Wilson, George Keller, Audio Sommelier

    Audible Audiobook (Audio Sommelier, May 7, 2019)
    President Woodrow Wilson entered World War I reluctantly, and he aimed to be strategic and fair when arranging peace terms to leave it. He delivered his 14-point treaty to Congress in January 1918. In it, he emphasized the importance of establishing free trade, restoring sovereign territories, and reducing arms. This speech outlined the terms on which he sought to establish enduring peace in Europe, which he recognized as vital to maintaining peace in the Americas as well as the rest of the world.
  • The Power of Kindness

    Timothy Shay Arthur, George Keller, Audio Sommelier

    Audiobook (Audio Sommelier, Oct. 8, 2018)
    Timothy Shay Arthur was an important moral force in 19th century. In The Power of Kindness, a boy’s father is disappointed when his harsh words do not lead to respect from his child. Then, a friend gently suggests the following: “Try him with kind words; they will prove a hundred-fold more powerful.” When the father tries this, the boy experiences an immediate change of heart.
  • The Street

    H. P. Lovecraft, Adriel Brandt, Audio Sommelier

    Audiobook (Audio Sommelier, Oct. 8, 2018)
    Though The Street tries to remain in the realm of horror and the supernatural, what it really amounts to is one of the earliest written documents of Lovecraft’s political stance and stance on other races. In this story, the street is the protagonist. Lovecraft documents its growth from quaint and colonial New England town to downtrodden and dirty as immigrants move in after the first world war. When a “vast group of terrorists” living in the neighborhood plot to overthrow the federal government on July 4th, the street decides to take matters into its own (metaphorical) hands.
  • The Picture in the House

    H. P. Lovecraft, Adriel Brandt, Audio Sommelier

    Audiobook (Audio Sommelier, Oct. 8, 2018)
    When the narrator accompanies a withered old Yankee back to his house, he is intrigued by the many old curiosities he finds around it - including precolonial furniture. One of these curiosities, an engraving, brings the old man on a terrifying reminisce about eating things that he was not allowed to have, and the narrator realizes that he could next on the plate. As blood drips from the ceiling onto the book, the narrator narrowly escapes when a bolt of lightning strikes the house, finally ending his streak of immortality.
  • The Statement of Randolph Carter

    H. P. Lovecraft, Adriel Brandt, Audio Sommelier

    Audiobook (Audio Sommelier, Oct. 8, 2018)
    Randolph Carter, a recurring character in many of Lovecraft’s stories, begins the story telling the harrowing tale to those who found him stumbling through the swamp. Carter and his friend, the occultist Harley Warren, went to investigate the location of a supposed portal to the underworld - near Big Cypress Swamp in Florida. Upon discovery of a tomb with stairs going deep into the earth, Warren decides to descend them. Only after waiting for what seems an eternity does Carter call down into the tomb, only to be returned with a voice that does not belong to Warren telling him that his friend was dead.
  • The Tomb

    H. P. Lovecraft, Adriel Brandt, Audio Sommelier

    Audiobook (Audio Sommelier, Oct. 8, 2018)
    The tomb is the story of Jervas, a little boy whose whole life begins to revolve around the tomb of the Hyde family. A childhood spent sneaking out to sleep beside the tomb eventually turns into a young adulthood of sleeping in a tomb with his name on it. After a stormy night and after heading for the tomb, he turns back and sees the Hyde mansion, which had been burnt down in previous years, aglow with splendor. Once Jervas went inside, the spectral mansion sets ablaze, and his vision is broken by his father. Jervas comes to find out he had never been inside the tomb at all - the lock was rusted shut.