Left Tackle Thayer

audiobook

Left Tackle Thayer

by Ralph Henry Barbour

EN·~6 hours·25 chapters

Chapters

25 total
1

ILLUSTRATIONS

0:15
2

CHAPTER I - A NEW BOY AND AN OLD ONE

17:07
3

CHAPTER II - CAPTAIN INNES RECEIVES

13:35
4

CHAPTER III - AMY AIRS HIS VIEWS

12:45
5

CHAPTER IV - CLINT CUTS PRACTICE

12:01
6

CHAPTER V - ON THE SECOND

13:39
7

CHAPTER VI - THE RUNAWAY WHEEL

13:54
8

CHAPTER VII - LOST!

13:20
9

CHAPTER VIII - THE MYSTERIOUS AUTO

17:02
10

CHAPTER IX - UNDER SUSPICION

14:20

Description

A sixteen‑year‑old boy named Clinton “Clint” Thayer has just traded the familiar hills of Cedar Run, Virginia, for the crisp, unfamiliar air of Brimfield Academy in upstate New York. The novel opens with him perched on an empty grand‑stand, watching a lone horse‑drawn mower while the countryside rolls by, a quiet portrait of his growing sense of isolation. Through his eyes we feel the clash of his Southern roots with the rigid, northern world he’s been thrust into, and the subtle tension between his mother’s ambitions and his own reluctant curiosity.

As Clint wanders the dormitories, gymnasium and athletic fields, he begins to map out the academy’s strange new rhythms. The story captures his tentative steps toward friendship, his awe at the unfamiliar landscape, and the quiet yearning for home that colors every sunrise. It’s a gentle, introspective portrait of a boy on the cusp of adulthood, navigating the first days of a life that feels both promising and oddly foreign.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~6 hours (368K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Charlie Kirschner and the PG Online Distributed Proofreading Team.

Release date

2004-09-27

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Ralph Henry Barbour

Ralph Henry Barbour

1870–1944

Best known for lively school and sports stories, this prolific American novelist turned teamwork, rivalry, and school spirit into fast-moving fiction for young readers. He wrote more than 100 novels, and many of them helped define the tone of early 20th-century boys' sports books.

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