The Thunder Bird

audiobook

The Thunder Bird

by B. M. Bower

EN·~6 hours·27 chapters

Chapters

27 total
1

B. M. BOWER

0:17
2

CHAPTER ONE - JOHNNY ASSUMES A DEBT OF HONOR

16:10
3

CHAPTER TWO - AND THE CAT CAME BACK

14:10
4

CHAPTER THREE - JOHNNY WOULD DO STUNTS

13:22
5

CHAPTER FOUR - MARY V TO THE RESCUE

21:08
6

CHAPTER FIVE - GODS OR SOMETHING

15:11
7

CHAPTER SIX - FAME WAITS UPON JOHNNY

13:15
8

CHAPTER SEVEN - MERELY TWO POINTS OF VIEW

15:46
9

CHAPTER EIGHT - SUDDEN MUST DO SOMETHING

15:04
10

CHAPTER NINE - GIVING THE COLT HIS HEAD

15:38

Description

Johnny Jewel is a daring young pilot fresh from the thrill of mastering his first airplane, yet his triumph quickly fades into a quieter, more pressing struggle. Engaged to the spirited Mary V., he finds his future tangled in a debt owed to her father and the looming question of whether the Army will accept his flying skills. The story opens in a dusty Tucson hotel, where Johnny wrestles with pride, love, and the weight of promises he feels unable to keep. As the war drums begin to echo, his resolve is tested by bureaucracy and the harsh reality of ordinary life.

Against the backdrop of post‑war America, Johnny’s ambitions clash with the expectations of a society that still sees him as a ranch hand rather than a soaring aviator. The narrative captures his internal conflict—balancing the romance of the skies with the grounded responsibilities of debt and honor. Listeners will be drawn into his restless spirit, his stubborn optimism, and the bittersweet tension between daring dreams and the demands of the world below.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~6 hours (370K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2004-12-27

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

B. M. Bower

B. M. Bower

1871–1940

A pioneering writer of Western fiction, she turned real ranch experience into lively stories full of cowboys, hard work, humor, and romance. Her books helped shape the popular image of the American West for early 20th-century readers.

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