White Ashes

audiobook

White Ashes

by Sidney R. (Sidney Robinson) Kennedy, Alden Charles Noble

EN·~12 hours·30 chapters

Chapters

30 total
1

KENNEDY-NOBLE

0:15
2

E-text prepared by Al Haines

0:02
3

TO - NATALIE STANTON KENNEDY - THIS BOOK - IS INSCRIBED BY THE AUTHORS - SIDNEY R. KENNEDY - ALDEN C. NOBLE - WHITE ASHES - CHAPTER I

30:55
4

CHAPTER II

31:14
5

CHAPTER III

30:27
6

CHAPTER IV

12:29
7

THE GUARDIAN FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK

18:28
8

CHAPTER V

28:25
9

CHAPTER VI

25:25
10

CHAPTER VII

28:31

Description

A devastating blaze has reduced New York’s business district to ash, and the insurance houses are scrambling to assess the financial fallout. In a quiet office high above the ruined streets, a lone figure studies a map of the inferno, weighing the magnitude of loss against the fragile hopes of those left standing. The scene captures a city at a crossroads, where ruin and opportunity clash in the smoky aftermath.

Amid the chaos, Charles Wilkinson, a perpetual optimist with a talent for half‑hearted schemes, clings to the possibility of securing his future through the wealth of his step‑uncle, John Hurd. He lingers over tea, not just for the drink but for the chance to stay close to the Hurd family—especially Isabel, whose steady presence seems as reliable as a bank vault. Wilkinson’s ambitions and the fragile bonds he forms set the stage for a tense battle between desperation and the promise of redemption.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~12 hours (702K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2007-01-07

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the authors

SR

Sidney R. (Sidney Robinson) Kennedy

b. 1875

A little-known early 20th-century novelist, he is best remembered today for The Lodestar, first published in 1905. Reliable public sources confirm the name attached to that book, but very little biographical detail about his life appears to survive online.

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AC

Alden Charles Noble

1880–1942

A Chicago poet and writer with a taste for adventure, wit, and early twentieth-century literary culture, he is best remembered for sea-roving verse like The Buccaneer Book. He also helped found the Blue Sky Press, a small Chicago press tied to the city’s arts scene.

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