A Hero of Liége: A Story of the Great War

audiobook

A Hero of Liége: A Story of the Great War

by Herbert Strang

EN·~4 hours·19 chapters

Chapters

19 total
1

CHAPTER I--THE OPENING OF THE GAME

17:20
2

CHAPTER II--THE FIRST TRICK

9:55
3

CHAPTER III--THE SECOND TRICK

10:52
4

CHAPTER IV--IN NEUTRAL TERRITORY

11:42
5

CHAPTER V--A CLOSE CALL

14:49
6

CHAPTER VI--THE OLD MILL

14:44
7

CHAPTER VII--A HORNET'S NEST

12:16
8

CHAPTER VIII--A FIGHT IN THE MILL

10:32
9

CHAPTER IX--IN THE TRENCHES

11:20
10

CHAPTER X--BROKEN THREADS

7:27

Description

Kenneth Amory, a seventeen‑year‑old raised in the shadow of a powerful Anglo‑German partnership, finds his world upended as the first stirrings of a continental conflict sweep through Cologne. Charged by his guardian Max Finkelstein to pack his belongings and head home, he hesitates, drawn instead to the bustling streets where regiments, artillery, and supply trains march in a practiced rhythm. The young man’s fascination with the mobilization—its orderly chaos and the palpable optimism of soldiers—offers a vivid glimpse of a society on the brink of war.

Through Kenneth’s eyes the novel paints the delicate balance between business ambitions and the looming threat of a larger conflict, while introducing a cast of characters whose loyalties and personalities hint at deeper entanglements. The narrative captures the tension of a city caught between industry and impending turmoil, inviting listeners to experience the uncertainty and excitement of a pivotal moment in history. As the first act unfolds, the stage is set for choices that will test family ties, personal courage, and the fragile hopes of a generation.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~4 hours (253K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2012-03-14

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Herbert Strang

Herbert Strang

Behind this pen name were two Oxford University Press editors who teamed up to write brisk, imaginative adventure stories for young readers. Their books mixed history, empire-era action, and schoolboy daring, and they became a familiar part of early 20th-century British children's fiction.

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