The Thin Red Line; and Blue Blood

audiobook

The Thin Red Line; and Blue Blood

by Arthur Griffiths

EN·~10 hours·51 chapters

Chapters

51 total

THE THIN RED LINE.

0:19

VOL. I - CONTENTS OF VOL. I.

0:44

VOL.II. - CONTENTS OF VOL. II.

0:27

THE THIN RED LINE. - VOLUME I

0:01

CHAPTER I. - THE COMMISSARY IS CALLED.

9:54

CHAPTER II. - ARREST AND INTERROGATION.

10:55

CHAPTER III. - THE MOUSETRAP.

14:01

CHAPTER IV. - A SPIDER'S WEB.

13:37

CHAPTER V. - THE WAR FEVER.

12:04

CHAPTER VI. - ON DANGEROUS GROUND.

11:48

Description

In the bustling heart of nineteenth‑century Paris, a shadowy quarter stretches beyond the Rue de Rivoli, where Tinplate Street teems with weary laborers, gossiping porters, and the clatter of horse‑drawn drays. By day the Hôtel Paradis appears as a neglected, shuttered lodging, its windows dark and its doors closed to the world. At night, however, the same unassuming façade gives way to a bustling gambling house, its lanterns flickering as a steady stream of carriages disgorges a colorful array of patrons into its secretive interior.

When a terrified porter’s wife bursts onto the street, screaming of a terrible crime, the local police are thrust into the hotel’s murky depths. A determined commissary and his colleague are summoned to confront the mystery, while the enigmatic proprietor, M. Bontoux, becomes the focus of their urgent summons. As they step through the heavy oak door, listeners are drawn into a tangled web of intrigue, betrayal, and the thin line between law and vice that defines the city’s underbelly.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~10 hours (600K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2005-12-31

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

Subjects

About the author

AG

Arthur Griffiths

1838–1908

A soldier, prison inspector, and prolific Victorian writer, he brought an unusual mix of official experience and storytelling to his books. His work ranges from crime and prison history to military history and sensation fiction, giving readers a lively window into the late 19th century.

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