Lilith

Author:
George MacDonald
Genres:
Fantastic Fiction ,
General Fiction
Language:
English
Read by:
Pete Williams, Pittsburgh, PA
Runnning time:
10:28:27
Upload date:
2008-03-18

Introduction

Chapters

1.
Introduction
00:03:06

2.
The Library
00:11:34

3.
The Mirror
00:05:29

4.
The Raven
00:15:19

5.
Somewhere or Nowhere?
00:15:10

6.
The Old Church
00:06:19

7.
The Sexton’s Cottage
00:13:07

8.
The Cemetery
00:16:05

9.
My Father’s Manuscript
00:12:08

10.
I Repent
00:12:07

11.
The Bad Burrow
00:11:45

12.
The Evil Wood
00:12:49

13.
Friends and Foes
00:09:07

14.
The Little Ones
00:21:09

15.
A Crisis
00:11:48

16.
A Strange Hostess
00:24:22

17.
A Gruesome Dance
00:21:56

18.
A Grotesque Tragedy
00:16:31

19.
Dead or Alive?
00:20:40

20.
The White Leech
00:13:11

21.
Gone!–But How?
00:10:56

22.
The Fugitive Mother
00:08:05

23.
Bulika
00:09:45

24.
A Woman of Bulika
00:05:45

25.
The White Leopardess
00:08:18

26.
The Princess
00:18:11

27.
A Battle Royal
00:10:28

28.
The Silent Fountain
00:08:09

29.
I Am Silenced
00:07:19

30.
The Persian Cat
00:16:20

31.
Adam Explains
00:10:14

32.
The Sexton’s Old Horse
00:12:07

33.
The Lovers and the Bags
00:12:27

34.
Lona’s Narrative
00:16:57

35.
Preparation
00:12:45

36.
The Little Ones in Bulika
00:11:24

37.
Mother and Daughter
00:11:15

38.
The Shadow
00:06:50

39.
To The House of Bitterness
00:18:14

40.
That Night
00:28:51

41.
The House of Death
00:29:49

42.
I Am Sent
00:09:28

43.
I Sleep The Sleep
00:14:05

44.
The Dreams That Came
00:20:22

45.
The Waking
00:12:19

46.
The Journey Home
00:10:05

47.
The City
00:09:44

48.
The “Endless Ending”
00:04:33

Description
Lilith, written by the father of fantasy literature, George MacDonald, was first published in 1895. Its importance was recognized in its later revival in paperback by Ballantine Books as the fifth volume of the celebrated Ballantine Adult Fantasy series in September, 1969. Lilith is considered among the darkest of MacDonald's works, and among the most profound. It is a story concerning the nature of life, death and salvation. Many believe MacDonald is arguing for Christian universalism, or the idea that all will eventually be saved. (Summary from Wikipedia)

Other versions
eBook