The Bridge of San Luis Rey Audiobook By Thornton Wilder cover art

The Bridge of San Luis Rey

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The Bridge of San Luis Rey

By: Thornton Wilder
Narrated by: Sam Waterston
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Pulitzer Prize Winner, The Novel, 1928

The Bridge of San Luis Rey, first published in 1927, was Thornton Wilder's first major work and won him instant international recognition. The story concerns the lives of five people who fall to their deaths on July 20, 1714, when a rope bridge breaks on a road near Lima, Peru. A humble Franciscan, Brother Juniper, witnesses the accident and determines to learn about the lives of the victims in order to find out whether this accident happened by chance or by plan.

Again and again, the novelist and playwright Thornton Wilder explores in his works the connections between the commonplace and cosmic dimensions of human experience, always returning to fundamental questions about the meaning of life.

The Bridge of San Luis Rey, one of the true great American classics, has been translated into more than 30 languages. The book won Wilder the first of his three Pulitzer Prizes.

©1927 Albert and Charles Boni Inc., 1955 renewed by Thornton Wilder (P)1997 HighBridge Company

Accolades & Awards

Pulitzer Prize
1928
Literary Fiction Pulitzer Prize Classics Fiction Historical Fiction Genre Fiction Heartfelt Parents & Adult Children Education Parenting & Families

Critic reviews

  • Pulitzer Prize winner

"A masterpiece." (New York Herald Tribune)
"A melancholy narrative of great power, simplicity and beauty." (AudioFile)

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Maybe this book is better taken in via reading it, rather than listening, for it lacked a compelling reason to stay with it. While I did complete the novel, I was left wanting more, wishing it was better, wishing for the profound.

Better read than listened to?

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This is a short but profound meditation on the moments that can bring a sense of reconciliation and redemption to our lives, and how we misunderstand or misinterpret even those we are closest to. I remain somewhat mystified as to why he chose to base this, however loosely, on actual historical persons, or why he dislocated them in time from their actual historical dates. For that matter, I remain mystified as to why the book's internal timeline refuses to behave itself. None of this detracts from the beauty and concision of this gem of a book.

The recording has mysteries of its own. Sam Waterston is a fine actor and his reading is full of expressive nuances, but for some reason the sound is muddy. I can't tell if this is because it's an old transfer from tape, or if Mr. Waterston's voice is pitched oddly, or because he lacks that special clipped diction that makes other readers more listenable. Maybe my hearing is just suffering from old age.

Short but profound

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It was one of those rare reads where I didn't want the book to end.

Really fabulous read, brilliant narrator.

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I read this in high school I think. I liked it then, but after listening to it today, I'm astonished how much stuck with me, and how much IS me.
A timeless story that changes with time. I #LoVE

Love is the only survivor

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Enjoyed the story, but this audiobook has very poor narration quality. There is alot of background static and the narrator speaks so low and quietly that I had to turn my volume up significantly just to hear him.

The narration is poor.

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