
L'ASSASSINAT DU PONT-ROUGE - PAR - CHARLES BARBARA - BIBLIOTHEQUE DES CHEMINS DE FER
L'ASSASSINAT DU PONT-ROUGE. - I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
VII.
VIII.
IX.
In a sun‑lit April morning, two old school friends, the sharp‑eyed Rodolphe and the modest, piano‑playing Max, share a quiet breakfast while debating the role of suffering in art. Their conversation drifts from philosophical musings to the everyday, as Max mentions a widowed piano teacher, Mme Thillard‑Ducornet, who lives with her mother and receives regular visits from a mysterious older man. The banter reveals contrasting attitudes toward poverty and ambition, setting a vivid portrait of Parisian life on the brink of something unsettling.
When Rodolphe learns of the piano teacher’s connection to the enigmatic Frédéric, curiosity pulls him toward a meeting that will change everything. The tranquil atmosphere of the café‑like chamber gives way to an undercurrent of tension, hinting that the seemingly ordinary acquaintances may soon be drawn into a dark event at the infamous Pont‑Rouge. Listeners will be invited to follow the unfolding mystery, guided by the characters’ starkly different worldviews and the looming presence of a crime that threatens to shatter their fragile equilibrium.
Language
fr
Duration
~3 hours (213K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-10-20
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1817–1866
A little-known but striking voice in 19th-century French literature, he moved through the bohemian world of Paris and wrote tales shaded by crime, psychology, and the uncanny. His work has drawn later interest for how boldly it blends realism with darker, suspenseful storytelling.
View all books
by Vinceslas-Eugène Dick

by Philippe Aubert de Gaspé

by Abraham Cahan

by Pauline E. (Pauline Elizabeth) Hopkins

by Laure Conan

by Eliza Fowler Haywood

by George Sand