Out of the Primitive

audiobook

Out of the Primitive

by Robert Ames Bennet

EN·~8 hours·39 chapters

Chapters

39 total

Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Charles Franks and the

0:12

TO MY FRIEND JAMES COLLIER - CHAPTER I - THE CASTAWAYS

17:48

CHAPTER II - TWO—AND ONE

15:42

CHAPTER III - LORD AND MAN

23:01

CHAPTER IV - THE EARL AND THE OTHERS

14:24

CHAPTER V - A REFRACTORY HERO

9:07

CHAPTER VI - THREE OF A KIND

1:04

M. F. GRIFFITH, C. E. CONSULTING ENGINEER

16:33

CHAPTER VII - THE HERO EXPLAINS

12:50

CHAPTER VIII - FLINT AND STEEL

17:38

Description

A mist‑shrouded dawn breaks over the tangled swamps of the Zambezi, where the sea’s phosphorescent glow hints at hidden reefs and forgotten wrecks. The narrative plunges listeners into the humid, oppressive heat of the African coast, painting the landscape with vivid descriptions of coral‑laden waters and the lingering stench of decay. From the first moments, the story’s voice balances crisp nautical detail with an almost palpable sense of danger.

Lord James, a restless aristocrat, and Captain Meggs, a seasoned skipper, lead a small crew aboard a modest rescue steamer on a desperate hunt for the missing liner Impala. Their dialogue crackles with urgency—concern for the ship’s passengers, speculation about the storm‑tossed vessel, and the pressure of a ticking clock as fever and starvation loom over any survivors. The tension between aristocratic privilege and gritty seafaring skill fuels a compelling cat‑and‑mouse chase through treacherous reefs.

As the sun climbs, the expedition’s resolve is tested against nature’s raw power, hinting at deeper mysteries beneath the waves. Listeners will be drawn into a tale of bravery, rivalry, and the relentless pursuit of hope in an unforgiving wilderness.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~8 hours (480K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2004-07-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Robert Ames Bennet

Robert Ames Bennet

1870–1954

Best known for brisk western adventures and a handful of early science-fiction tales, this Denver-born writer moved easily between frontier action, lost-world fantasy, and magazine storytelling. Several of his novels were popular enough to be adapted for film, helping his work reach readers well beyond the pulp era.

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