Tales of Trail and Town

audiobook

Tales of Trail and Town

by Bret Harte

EN·~6 hours

Chapters

Description

In a mining camp that once stretched along a single dusty road, the rush of lead gave way to a sudden surge of saloons, a church, and a school. The town’s newest name—Atherly—was stamped on a fresh waterworks system and a gilded hotel, half‑celebrating progress and half‑lamenting the loss of the open‑handed frontier. With money flowing, doors began to lock and credit cards replaced the old habit of borrowing from strangers.

At the center stands Peter Atherly, a tall, dark‑haired man whose Roman nose and steady gaze give him an almost aristocratic air. Proud of an English lineage that he believes sets him apart from his Irish and German neighbors, he speaks of race and reputation while the town around him wrestles with its own identity. His demeanor is as sinewy as the landscape, hinting at both the vigor of a pioneer and the melancholy of a man aware of his contradictions.

Beneath the public swagger lies a private concern: his mother, once a washerwoman for the camp, now lives in a private asylum for inebriates. Peter visits her often, and a sudden telegram summons him back to the town just as an unsettling incident begins to test his confidence in the name he so cherishes.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~6 hours (372K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Donald Lainson; David Widger

Release date

2006-05-18

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Bret Harte

Bret Harte

1836–1902

Best known for vivid tales of miners, gamblers, and rough-edged dreamers, this early master of Western fiction helped turn the California Gold Rush into enduring American literature. His stories mix humor, sentiment, and sharp observation in a way that still feels lively today.

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