The Red Track: A Story of Social Life in Mexico

audiobook

The Red Track: A Story of Social Life in Mexico

by Gustave Aimard

EN·~8 hours·28 chapters

Chapters

28 total
1

PREFACE.

5:54
2

CHAPTER I. - THE SIERRA OF THE WIND RIVER.

16:26
3

CHAPTER II. - THE DEAD ALIVE.

18:40
4

CHAPTER III. - THE COMPACT.

15:15
5

CHAPTER IV. - THE TRAVELLERS.

16:41
6

CHAPTER V. - THE FORT OF THE CHICHIMÈQUES.

17:17
7

CHAPTER VI. - THE SURPRISE.

15:25
8

CHAPTER VII. - THE EXPLANATION.

14:28
9

CHAPTER VIII. - A DECLARATION OF WAR.

14:51
10

CHAPTER IX. - MEXICO.

18:41

Description

A striking portrait of Mexico’s capital emerges from the keen eyes of a seasoned frontiersman who has spent years among Indigenous peoples and now turns his gaze to urban life. With a commitment to honesty that borders on the obsessive, the narrator records the bustling streets, lively markets, and the intricate customs that shape daily existence in a city on the brink of war. His observations are vivid enough to make listeners feel the heat of the plazas, hear the clamor of vendors, and sense the underlying tensions that ripple through society.

The work blends personal anecdote with meticulous detail, offering a rare glimpse into the social hierarchy, religious festivals, and the mingling of old‑world traditions with new‑world realities. As the author navigates cafés, taverns, and government quarters, he introduces a cast of characters whose lives reflect the broader struggles of a nation in turmoil. This honest, unembellished chronicle invites listeners to experience Mexico’s pulse as it was seen by a traveler who refuses to romanticize what he witnesses.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~8 hours (471K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Camille Bernard and Marc D'Hooghe (Images generously made available by the Internet Archive - University of California)

Release date

2013-05-29

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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