Who goes there? : The story of a spy in the Civil War

audiobook

Who goes there? : The story of a spy in the Civil War

by B. K. (Blackwood Ketcham) Benson

EN·~14 hours·45 chapters

Chapters

45 total
1

THE STORY OF A SPY - IN - THE CIVIL WAR

0:02
2

BY - B.K. BENSON

0:01
3

MAPS

0:00
4

INTRODUCTION

23:17
5

WHO GOES THERE?

0:01
6

I. THE ADVANCE

7:39
7

II. A SHAMEFUL DAY

5:55
8

III. I BREAK MY MUSKET

12:31
9

IV. A PERSONAGE

11:39
10

V. WITH THE DOCTOR IN CAMP

14:52

Description

A young New Englander recounts a baffling childhood condition that repeatedly wipes clean months of his life, leaving only fragmented skills and vague impressions behind. When a sudden slip on a frozen pond triggers a six‑month blackout, he is sent to Charleston, where the unfamiliar Southern climate and a new school environment mask his bewilderment. As his memories slowly stitch themselves back together, he discovers the brutal reality of the Mexican–American War and the looming conflict that will soon engulf the nation.

Against this backdrop of personal disorientation, the narrator is drawn into the secretive world of wartime espionage, using his uncanny ability to recall details while others forget. His observations of military leaders, shifting loyalties, and the stark contrast between North and South create a tense, intimate portrait of a nation on the brink. Listeners will be carried through his inner struggle to piece together identity, duty, and the perilous choices of a spy in the Civil War’s early days.

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Details

Full title

Who goes there? : The story of a spy in the Civil War The Story of a Spy in the Civil War

Language

en

Duration

~14 hours (831K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Charlie Kirschner and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team from images provided by the Million Book Project.

Release date

2004-05-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

BK

B. K. (Blackwood Ketcham) Benson

1845–1924

Civil War experience and years in publishing gave this American novelist a strong feel for conflict, loyalty, and regional life. He is best remembered for historical fiction such as Who Goes There? and A Friend with the Countersign.

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