Terry

audiobook

Terry

by James Hilton

EN·~8 hours·13 chapters

Chapters

13 total
1

TERRY

0:33
2

CHAPTER ONE

37:47
3

CHAPTER TWO

46:19
4

CHAPTER THREE

55:29
5

CHAPTER FOUR

50:22
6

CHAPTER FIVE

56:40
7

CHAPTER SIX

33:57
8

CHAPTER SEVEN

46:40
9

CHAPTER EIGHT

32:12
10

CHAPTER NINE

35:50

Description

On a crisp London evening the narrator bumps into a solitary stranger outside a Hampstead tube station, both dressed in threadbare overcoats. The stranger, Terrington, asks for directions to the mysterious End House, and the narrator, also headed there, invites him to join. Their walk is quiet, punctuated only by glances at lamplit streets, revealing Terrington’s striking looks and his brooding, almost forlorn demeanor. As they reach the venue, it becomes clear he is a brilliant but reticent bacteriology lecturer, uneasy about the glittering social scene awaiting him.

At the dinner, Terrington is placed between a novelist and a ballet dancer, each eager to draw him into conversation, but his anxiety makes him seem a wallflower. The narrator, sensing his discomfort, promises to look after him after the formalities end. Meanwhile, Mrs. Severn, the hostess, fills the evening with music, her voice a blend of chanson and comedy that softens the stiff atmosphere. Listeners are invited to follow Terrington’s tentative steps into a world of politics, art, and unexpected friendships, wondering whether his quiet brilliance will finally find a voice.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~8 hours (471K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Original publisher

United Kingdom: T. Butterworth, 1927.

Credits

Dangny and Laura Natal Rodrigues (Images generously made available by Hathi Trust Digital Library.)

Release date

2023-04-18

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

James Hilton

James Hilton

1900–1954

Best known for creating Shangri-La and for the quietly moving classic Goodbye, Mr. Chips, this English-born novelist wrote stories that blended warmth, escapism, and emotional clarity. His books were hugely popular in the 1930s and 1940s, and several became successful films.

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