
Archibald Malmaison - by Julian Hawthorne
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A thoughtful narrator opens the tale by wrestling with the age‑old clash between childhood wonder and adult fact‑finding. He argues that the most compelling stories are not pure mirrors of reality, but crafted fictions that let us shape a small, harmonious world amid life’s harsh randomness. This philosophical framing invites listeners to consider why we cling to imagination even when the truth is stark.
The story then turns to Archibald Malmaison, a man whose inner life is as puzzling as it is captivating. Set in the early twentieth‑century countryside surrounding London, the events are presented as genuinely true, yet they unfold with a strange, almost dream‑like quality. As the narrative progresses, Archibald’s secret passions and contradictions emerge, offering a rich psychological portrait that feels both intimate and mysterious.
Through careful selection of incidents, the narrator lets Archibald’s hidden depths breathe, promising a listening experience that balances factual intrigue with the lyrical pull of a finely wrought character study.
Language
en
Duration
~3 hours (196K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Curtis Weyant, Eric Eldred, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
Release date
2005-01-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1846–1934
Best remembered as the son of Nathaniel Hawthorne, he built a long writing career of his own, producing novels, short stories, essays, travel books, and journalism. His life mixed literary ambition, public controversy, and an unusually wide range of subjects.
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by Julian Hawthorne

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by Julian Hawthorne

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by Julian Hawthorne

by Julian Hawthorne

by Julian Hawthorne