The Mystery of Murray Davenport: A Story of New York at the Present Day

audiobook

The Mystery of Murray Davenport: A Story of New York at the Present Day

by Robert Neilson Stephens

EN·~6 hours·18 chapters

Chapters

18 total
1

CHAPTER I — MR. LARCHER GOES OUT IN THE RAIN

19:45
2

CHAPTER II — ONE OUT OF SUITS WITH FORTUNE

21:36
3

CHAPTER III — A READY-MONEY MAN

22:19
4

CHAPTER IV — AN UNPROFITABLE CHILD

21:41
5

CHAPTER V — A LODGING BY THE RIVER

20:00
6

CHAPTER VI — THE NAME OF ONE TURL COMES UP

11:54
7

CHAPTER VII — MYSTERY BEGINS

17:03
8

CHAPTER VIII — MR. LARCHER INQUIRES

26:03
9

CHAPTER IX — MR. BUD'S DARK HALLWAY

24:30
10

CHAPTER X — A NEW ACQUAINTANCE

17:56

Description

On a storm‑laden August night in Manhattan, young writer Thomas Larcher watches the rain cascade over the city’s neon lights from his modest second‑floor flat. A sudden knock delivers a telegram from Edna, a woman whose name stirs both excitement and nervous anticipation in him. He dashes through the downpour to the Savoy Hotel, where the plush drawing‑room waits, his heart thudding as he prepares for a long‑awaited encounter.

Edna appears, poised and elegant, her blue eyes and dark hair framing a smile that seems both invitation and challenge. Over wine and cake she reveals a curious request: she needs Larcher’s help locating Murray Davenport, a shadowy figure known only through whispers in the literary circles they both inhabit. The brief meeting sets Larcher on a path through rain‑slick streets, hidden motives, and the bustling undercurrents of contemporary New York, promising a puzzle that will test his wit and his feelings.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~6 hours (346K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Text file produced by Stan Goodman, Mary Meehan and Distributed Proofreaders HTML file produced by David Widger

Release date

2005-10-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Robert Neilson Stephens

Robert Neilson Stephens

1867–1906

Best known for sweeping historical adventures and stage-ready storytelling, this American writer moved easily between novels and plays. His work helped bring romance, intrigue, and theatrical energy to readers at the turn of the twentieth century.

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