The Missouri Outlaws

audiobook

The Missouri Outlaws

by Gustave Aimard

EN·~4 hours·4 chapters

Chapters

4 total

THE MISSOURI OUTLAWS - By - GUSTAVE AIMARD - AUTHOR OF "PRAIRIE FLOWER," "INDIAN SCOUT," ETC., ETC. - TRANSLATED BY PERCY B. ST. JOHN

4:49:10

LONDON - JOHN and ROBERT MAXWELL - MILTON HOUSE, SHOE LANE, FLEET STREET - AND - 35, ST. BRIDE STREET, LUDGATE CIRCUS. - 1877

0:08

NOTICE.

0:40

PREFACE

1:58

Description

A sweeping tale of early‑nineteenth‑century frontier life opens aboard the battered ship Patriot, where two strikingly different men—Pierre, a refined yet weather‑worn captain, and a brooding, muscular youth—exchange uneasy words before the vessel slips into the restless waters of the Missouri region. Their conversation hints at deeper loyalties and looming danger, setting the stage for a world where squatters, hunters, and restless outlaws carve existence from the untamed prairie.

From the rugged valley of the Dickson family to the enigmatic figure of Tom Mitchell, the narrative weaves gritty adventure with quiet moments of tenderness. As alliances shift and secrets surface, readers are drawn into the stark beauty of the western landscape, feeling the pulse of a community bound by honor, love, and the ever‑present threat of betrayal. The story promises a vivid portrait of an America on the edge of civilization, where each character must confront both external foes and the shadows within their own hearts.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~4 hours (280K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2014-01-03

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Gustave Aimard

Gustave Aimard

1818–1883

Adventure, frontier danger, and far-off landscapes run through these fast-moving novels by a French writer who turned his taste for travel into popular fiction. Best known for stories set in the Americas, he helped bring the western and frontier tale to a wide 19th-century readership.

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