Max Fargus

audiobook

Max Fargus

by Owen Johnson

EN·~4 hours·25 chapters

Chapters

25 total
1

MAXFARGUS

0:17
2

ILLUSTRATIONS

0:13
3

CHAPTER I THE HOUSE OF THE TIN SAILOR

14:53
4

CHAPTER II IN THE EYES OF THE LAW

9:13
5

CHAPTER III THE FIRM OF GROLL AND BOFINGER

23:42
6

CHAPTER IV THE LITTLE MAN OF THE SHOVEL HAT

8:00
7

CHAPTER V BOFINGER LOSES HOPE

10:07
8

CHAPTER VI MISS MORISSEY IS MISS VAUGHN

12:41
9

CHAPTER VII THE COMPACT

10:14
10

CHAPTER VIII THE DISCOVERER OF THE OYSTER

12:15

Description

In the waning light of a March evening in 1870s New York, a quiet block of red‑brick houses stretches east of Stuyvesant Square. Uniform and unremarkable, the street houses modest families who earn a modest living, attend church, and occasional theater. A lone tin sailor perched above a doorway—its paddles turning in the breeze—offers a stubborn splash of individuality amid the sameness. The neighborhood’s rhythm is broken only by the distant glow of a brothel lantern and the occasional clatter of the elevated railway.

That night a nervous stranger slips through the dimly lit parlor, his satchel heavy with news. He is met by a young woman in white, her eyes bright with hope until he delivers a shocking confession: her husband, long presumed dead, is alive—yet the name he utters, Max Fargus, carries a dark warning. The brief exchange hints at a tangled web of ambition, betrayal, and the ruthless forces shaping the city’s underbelly. Listeners are drawn into the mystery of how one man’s rise will upend the fragile lives around him.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~4 hours (262K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Edwards, Martin Pettit and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2014-07-22

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Owen Johnson

Owen Johnson

1878–1952

Best remembered for the lively school stories that introduced Dink Stover, this American novelist and short-story writer captured prep-school ambition, rivalry, and growing up with wit and energy. His Lawrenceville tales became classics of early 20th-century popular fiction.

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