Copper Coleson's Ghost

audiobook

Copper Coleson's Ghost

by Edward P. Hendrick

EN·~4 hours·29 chapters

Chapters

29 total
1

Copper Coleson’s Ghost

0:32
2

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

0:16
3

CHAPTER I FRIENDS—NEW AND OLD

14:54
4

CHAPTER II COPPER COLESON

7:27
5

CHAPTER III THE HAUNTED MINE

6:15
6

CHAPTER IV THE RACE

12:08
7

CHAPTER V A STRANGE CONVERSATION

9:41
8

CHAPTER VI IN TRAINING

7:44
9

CHAPTER VII THE BIG GAME

10:32
10

CHAPTER VIII A SUMMER PROPOSITION

12:31

Description

In the sleepy town of Truesdell, a sprawling apple tree by the Blake homestead has become an impromptu playground for a trio of teens. Ned Blake, lanky and daring, shows off rope‑swing tricks while his friend Tommy Beals watches with a mixture of awe and comic reluctance, and the laid‑back Dave “Weary” Wilbur lends a hand at the grindstone. Their banter and light‑hearted bets paint a vivid picture of summer afternoons spent testing strength, courage, and the limits of youthful imagination.

Everything shifts when a new neighbor moves into the house opposite the tree, bringing with him rumors of Copper Coleson’s lingering presence. As the boys’ curiosity grows, the ordinary games they play begin to feel edged with an uncanny tension, hinting at a secret that the town has long kept hidden. Listeners are invited to follow their adventures as friendship, folklore, and a restless spirit intertwine in a tale that balances everyday life with a whisper of the supernatural.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~4 hours (240K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Rod Crawford, Dave Morgan, Special Collections of the University of Florida Library, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2014-12-11

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

EP

Edward P. Hendrick

Known for a spooky adventure tale set in a mining camp, this early 20th-century writer published fiction for younger readers and magazine audiences. His surviving public record is thin, which gives his work an old-library air of mystery all its own.

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