
audiobook
ETIDORHPA OR THE END OF EARTH.
ASCRIPTION.
PREFACE TO THIS EDITION.
A VALUABLE AND UNIQUE LIBRARY.
ILLUSTRATIONS.
PROLOGUE.
ETIDORPHA.
CHAPTER I. "NEVER LESS ALONE THAN WHEN ALONE."
CHAPTER II. A FRIENDLY CONFERENCE.
CHAPTER III. A SECOND INTERVIEW WITH THE MYSTERIOUS VISITOR.
A strange manuscript arrives, purportedly penned by a secretive figure named Etidorhpa, whose very name hints at an otherworldly origin. The narrator, a curious scholar, sets out to decode the cryptic account of a journey that descends deep beneath the earth, where ordinary physics give way to hidden forces and luminous realms. Along the way, the prose weaves vivid descriptions of subterranean chambers, luminous beings, and the uncanny geometry of a world that seems both scientific and mystical.
Beyond the adventure, the work reflects on the nature of books themselves, treating each volume as a silent tomb that still speaks to the living. Its lyrical meditations on memory, mortality, and the unseen spirits that linger in old libraries create a haunting atmosphere that lingers long after the listener’s eyes have closed. The result is a mesmerizing blend of speculative science, philosophical rumination, and Victorian wonder that invites the imagination to wander far beneath the surface of the familiar world.
Full title
Etidorhpa; or, The End of Earth. The Strange History of a Mysterious Being and the Account of a Remarkable Journey The Strange History of a Mysterious Being and the Account of a Remarkable Journey
Language
en
Duration
~12 hours (697K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Pat McCoy, Suzanne Shell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2011-10-16
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1849–1936
A pioneering American pharmacist and botanical researcher, he helped shape the study of medicinal plants in the United States while also writing one of the strangest cult novels of the 19th century. His life joined science, medicine, and literary curiosity in a way that still feels unusual today.
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