The Barber of Paris

audiobook

The Barber of Paris

by Paul de Kock

EN·~11 hours·31 chapters

Chapters

31 total
1

CHAPTER I The Barber's House

17:43
2

CHAPTER II The Great Nobleman and the Barber

28:19
3

CHAPTER III Blanche. A History of Sorcerers

24:50
4

CHAPTER IV The Chevalier Chaudoreille

26:18
5

CHAPTER V The Music Lesson

15:52
6

CHAPTER VI The Lovers. The Gossips.

24:45
7

CHAPTER VII Intrigues Thicken

29:25
8

CHAPTER VIII Conversation by the Fireside

13:33
9

CHAPTER IX The Closet. The Abduction

18:35
10

CHAPTER X The Little House. A New Game

28:10

Description

In the murky winter of 1632, Paris is a city of rain‑slick cobbles, foul smells, and relentless crime. Lanterns flicker in the gloom while thieves and duellists roam the streets, and the very air seems heavy with danger. Into this chaotic world a solitary, solemn figure makes his way toward a modest shop marked “Touquet, Barber and Bathkeeper,” his cloak and brimmed hat shielding him from the relentless downpour.

Inside, the barber is more than a simple hair‑cutter; he is a keen observer of the city’s pulse, listening to whispered rumors while wielding scissors that have known the hands of nobles and rogues alike. As he tends to his clients, he becomes entangled in the subtle intrigues that swirl through the neighborhoods, offering a glimpse of the hidden lives that pulse beneath Paris’s grim façade. The story promises a vivid portrait of a city on the brink, seen through the eyes of a man whose trade places him at the crossroads of ordinary lives and shadowy plots.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~11 hours (665K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from scanned images of public domain material from the Google Print project.)

Release date

2011-09-16

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Paul de Kock

Paul de Kock

1793–1871

A hugely popular storyteller in 19th-century Europe, he filled his novels with lively scenes of everyday Paris and a strong taste for comedy. His books may have divided critics, but readers kept returning for their energy, humor, and street-level view of city life.

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