
THE KAI LUNG FANTASY SERIES
The Wallet of Kai Lung, Kai Lung's Golden Hours & Kai Lung Unrolls His MatBy Ernest BramahLength28h 57m
About this audiobook
This carefully crafted ebook: "THE KAI LUNG FANTASY SERIES: The Wallet of Kai Lung, Kai Lung's Golden Hours & Kai Lung Unrolls His Mat" is formatted for your eReader with a functional and detailed table of contents.
Kai Lung is a Chinese storyteller whose travels and exploits serve mainly as excuses to introduce substories. He is a man of very simple motivations; most frequently, he is animated by a desire for enough taels to be able to feed and clothe himself. This character usually comes into conflict with barbarians, bandits, and other people who are not classically educated, as well as various unscrupulous individuals who are intent on taking away his property.
Ernest Bramah (1868-1942) was an English author. He published numerous thriller books, detective stories and supernatural tales, creating the characters Kai Lung and Max Carrados. Bramah's detective stories were ranked with Conan Doyle, his politico-science fiction with H. G. Wells and his supernatural stories with Algernon Blackwood.
Table of Contents:
The Wallet of Kai Lung
The Transmutation of Ling
The Story of Yung Chang
The Probation of Sen Heng
The Experiment of the Mandarin Chan Hung
The Confession of Kai Lung
The Vengeance of Tung Fel
The Career of the Charitable Quen-Ki-Tong
The Vision of Yin, the Son of Yat Huang
The Ill-Regulated Destiny of Kin Yen, the Picture-Maker
Kai Lung's Golden Hours
Kai Lung Unrolls His Mat
Audiobook details
GenreFantasy, General Fiction
Length28 hrs 57 mins
Narrated byListen with 1,000+ voices
FormateBook with Audio
Publish dateApr 25, 2016
LanguageEnglish
Table of contents
1THE KAI LUNG FANTASY SERIES:
19Not Concerned With Any Particular Attribute of Those Who Are Involved
2THE WALLET OF KAI LUNG
20The Timely Disputation Among Those of an Inner Chamber of Yu-Ping
3The Transmutation of Ling (pt. 1)
21The Propitious Dissension Between Two Whose General Attributes Have Already Been Sufficiently Described
4The Transmutation of Ling (pt. 2)
22The Incredible Obtuseness of Those Who Had Opposed the Virtuous Kai Lung
5The Story of Yung Chang
23Of Which It Is Written: “in Shallow Water Dragons Become the Laughing-Stock of Shrimps”
Show all chaptersShow less
6The Probation of Sen Heng
24The Out-Passing Into a State of Assured Felicity of the Much-Enduring Two With Whom These Printed Leaves Have Chiefly Been Concerned
7The Experiment of the Mandarin Chan Hung
25Part I. The Protecting Ancestors
8The Confession of Kai Lung
26The Malignity of the Depraved Ming-Shu Rears Its Offensive Head
9The Vengeance of Tung Fel
27The Difficult Progression of the Virtuous Kai Lung Assumes a Concrete Form
10The Career of the Charitable Quen-Ki-Tong
28The Further Continuance of Kai Lung’s Quest and His Opportune Encounter With an Outcast Band, All Ignorant of the Classical Examples of the Past
11The Vision of Yin, the Son of Yat Huang
29At the Extremity of His Resource, the Continent Kai Lung Encounters One Who Leads the Unaffected Life
12The Ill-Regulated Destiny of Kin Yen, the Picture-Maker
30The Meeting by the Way With the Warrior of Chi-U and What Emerged Therefrom
13The Encountering of Six Within a Wood
31The Ambiguous Face Upon the One Found in a Wood and the Effete Ming-Shu’s Dilemma
14The Inexorable Justice of the Mandarin Shan Tien
32The Concave-Witted Li-Loe’s Insatiable Craving Serves a Meritorious End and Two (Who Shall Be Nameless) Are Led Toward a Snare
15The Degraded Persistence of the Effete Ming-Shu
33In Which the Position of the Estimable Kai Lung Is Such That He Must Either Go Up or Down
16The Inopportune Behaviour of the Covetous Li-Loe
34Wherein the Footsteps of the Two Who Have Induced These Printed Leaves Assume a Homeward Bend
17The Timely Intervention of the Mandarin Shan Tien’s Lucky Day
35Part II. The Great Sky Lantern: How Kai Lung Sought to Discourage One Who Did Not Gain His Approbation
18The High-Minded Strategy of the Amiable Hwa-Mei
36Part III. The Bringer of Good News: Whereby the Angle at Which Events Present Themselves May Be Varied