A Woman Perfected

audiobook

A Woman Perfected

by Richard Marsh

EN·~8 hours·37 chapters

Chapters

37 total
1

By the same Author

0:16
2

CHAPTER I - STRICKEN

16:20
3

CHAPTER II - THE OPEN WINDOW

12:14
4

CHAPTER III - LITTLE BY LITTLE

16:40
5

CHAPTER IV - THE AVERNIAN SLOPE

14:08
6

CHAPTER V - PETER PIPER'S POPULAR PILLS

16:50
7

CHAPTER VI - HER LOVE STORY

17:22
8

CHAPTER VII - THE PUZZLE WHICH DONALD LINDSAY LEFT BEHIND HIM

20:50
9

CHAPTER VIII - A PHILANTHROPIST

12:09
10

CHAPTER IX - THE BUTLER

13:55

Description

When a sudden, inexplicable fire flares in the study of the imposing Cloverlea estate on an unusually sweltering April day, the normally reticent Mr. Lindsay disappears, leaving the room locked from the inside and the fire blazing for no apparent reason. His daughter, Nora, and her school‑friend Elaine are the first to notice the oddity, their curiosity quickly turning to alarm as they find the study empty yet illuminated. The scene is set for a puzzling mystery that threatens to upend the tranquil routine of the household.

Determined to uncover the truth, Nora pushes past the housekeeper’s warnings and follows the butler’s desperate entry through a shattered window, only to discover a figure collapsed on the floor, clutching at something unseen. The uneasy alliance between the young women and the startled staff hints at hidden tensions and secrets long kept behind the manor’s polished doors. As the fire crackles and the night deepens, the first act of this tale promises a blend of suspense and the subtle social intrigues of a bygone era.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~8 hours (511K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Charles Bowen, from page scans provided by Google Books

Release date

2011-12-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Richard Marsh

Richard Marsh

1857–1915

A master of late-Victorian suspense, this prolific English writer is best remembered for The Beetle, the eerie 1897 thriller that once rivaled Dracula in popularity. Writing under a pseudonym, he built a huge readership with stories full of mystery, menace, and sharp twists.

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