Elizabeth Hobart at Exeter Hall

audiobook

Elizabeth Hobart at Exeter Hall

by Jean K. (Jean Katherine) Baird

EN·~5 hours·15 chapters

Chapters

15 total
1

CHAPTER I. - PREPARATIONS FOR SCHOOL.

16:34
2

CHAPTER II. - THE JOURNEY.

27:43
3

CHAPTER III. - THE DINNER EPISODE.

24:03
4

CHAPTER IV. - THE RECEPTION.

28:24
5

CHAPTER V. - A BOX FROM HOME.

28:23
6

CHAPTER VI. - HOW “SMILES” WAS SCALPED.

21:32
7

CHAPTER VII. - DEFYING THE POWERS.

29:31
8

CHAPTER VIII. - MIDNIGHT CONFIDENCES.

26:10
9

CHAPTER IX. - JOE’S MESSAGE.

19:53
10

CHAPTER X. - CLOUDS AND GATHERING STORMS.

23:10

Description

In the soot‑blackened town of Bitumen, narrow unpaved streets bustle with children from Irish, Italian, Polish, Slavic and Russian families, each splashing through rain‑filled gutters while a lone saloon, run by the shrewd Dennis O’Day, watches over the restless crowd. A newly opened Club House, stocked with cheap coffee and cheap talk, threatens O’Day’s business, hinting at hidden powers pulling the town’s strings. Amid the grime, the superintendent’s house at Mountain Glen stands out—a modest wooden home with bright curtains, manicured lawns, and a splash of scarlet sage that offers a brief glimpse of comfort in an otherwise harsh landscape.

At the heart of this community is Mr. Hobart, a once‑promising mining engineer whose groundbreaking work on mine‑explosive safety was cut short by a mysterious illness. Sent to Bitumen for its crisp mountain air, he now lives in the serene Glen house, battling the lingering effects of his condition while striving to rebuild his career and protect his family. As he adjusts to the town’s rough edges, the tensions between O’Day, the Club House, and the miners promise to test both his resolve and the fragile peace of Bitumen.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (333K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2008-08-10

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Jean K. (Jean Katherine) Baird

Jean K. (Jean Katherine) Baird

1872–1918

Writing for young readers in the early 1900s, she created school stories and domestic adventures that are warm, lively, and easy to sink into. Her books often follow girls and young women as they navigate friendship, duty, and growing up.

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