Le Montonéro

audiobook

Le Montonéro

by Gustave Aimard

FR·~8 hours·21 chapters

Chapters

21 total
1

TABLE

0:20
2

I. LE CALLEJÓN DE LAS CRUCES

28:00
3

II. LA LETTRE

26:01
4

III. LES RECLUSES

26:50
5

IV. L'ENTREVUE

24:56
6

V. LES PRÉPARATIFS DE TYRO

27:39
7

VI. COMPLICATIONS

24:45
8

VII. LA PANIQUE

22:53
9

VIII. LE SOLITAIRE

23:57
10

IX. LE GUARANIS

24:38

Description

In the winding streets of San Miguel de Tucumán, a city that feels half‑grown out of a medieval dream, the narrow Callejón de las Cruces winds between shadowed houses and the river’s edge. At its heart stands a massive, iron‑grilled mansion that locals whisper about as the “Maison‑Noire,” a place that seems more a silent tomb than a convent for women devoted to prayer and charity. The air is thick with the scent of overgrown grass and the distant hum of a celebration, but beneath the calm lies a secret world waiting to be uncovered.

One moonless night, a band of armed men breaches the mansion’s locked door, escorted by four veiled figures whose presence is felt more than seen. Their silent exchange with an unseen porter hints at hidden alliances and mysteries that the town’s bustling festivities ignore. As the door shuts shut again, the quiet streets resume their ordinary rhythm, leaving listeners to wonder what unseen forces move behind those dark walls and what destiny awaits the women who dwell within.

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Details

Language

fr

Duration

~8 hours (512K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Camille Bernard and Marc D'Hooghe (Images generously made available by Gallica, Bibliothque nationale de France.)

Release date

2016-02-08

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

Subjects

About the author

Gustave Aimard

Gustave Aimard

1818–1883

Adventure, frontier danger, and far-off landscapes run through these fast-moving novels by a French writer who turned his taste for travel into popular fiction. Best known for stories set in the Americas, he helped bring the western and frontier tale to a wide 19th-century readership.

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