The Grandissimes

audiobook

The Grandissimes

by George Washington Cable

EN·~11 hours·64 chapters

Chapters

64 total

THE GRANDISSIMES

0:01

BY GEORGE W. CABLE

0:04

PHOTOGRAVURES

2:19

CHAPTER I - MASKED BATTERIES

12:57

CHAPTER II - THE FATE OF THE IMMIGRANT

13:26

CHAPTER III - "AND WHO IS MY NEIGHBOR?"

4:19

CHAPTER IV - FAMILY TREES

17:18

CHAPTER V - A MAIDEN WHO WILL NOT MARRY

9:19

CHAPTER VI - LOST OPPORTUNITIES

7:23

CHAPTER VII - WAS IT HONORÉ GRANDISSIME?

13:32

Description

A lavish masked ball in the newly renamed Théâtre St. Philippe sets the stage for a night of glittering costumes, soaring violins, and whispered rumors in 1803 New Orleans. Amid the candlelight, the city’s elite—French Creoles, daring adventurers, and dignified Native‑American royalty—mix freely, each hiding identities behind ornate masks. The occasion is more than festivity; it arrives just as the United States is poised to acquire the territory, and the gathering becomes a subtle arena for pride, nostalgia, and the uneasy anticipation of change.

At the heart of the evening is the larger‑than‑life Fusilier de Grandissime family, whose members juggle ancestral honor, personal ambition, and the mysteries of a secretive newcomer. A seasoned veteran, Agricola, finds himself drawn into playful yet pointed banter with an enigmatic “Indian Queen,” their exchange hinting at old loyalties and hidden motives. As the night unfolds, listeners are invited to savor the rich cultural tapestry and the first stirrings of intrigue that promise deeper conflicts to come.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~11 hours (647K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Suzanne Shell, Charlie Kirschner and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.

Release date

2004-05-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

George Washington Cable

George Washington Cable

1844–1925

Best known for vivid stories of Creole New Orleans, this American novelist brought the city’s language, customs, and social tensions to life. His fiction and essays also made him an unusually outspoken Southern voice for racial equality after the Civil War.

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