Wild Sports in the Far West

audiobook

Wild Sports in the Far West

by Friedrich Gerstäcker

EN·~11 hours·14 chapters

Chapters

14 total
1

WILD SPORTS IN The Far West.

0:19
2

PREFACE.

3:51
3

W I L D S P O R T S AND ADVENTURES IN THE FAR WEST. - CHAPTER I.

49:44
4

CHAPTER II.

50:00
5

CHAPTER III.

36:18
6

CHAPTER IV.

56:08
7

CHAPTER V.

55:10
8

CHAPTER VI.

53:16
9

CHAPTER VII.

45:55
10

CHAPTER VIII.

1:21:06

Description

An observant traveler journals his voyage from a German port to the bustling harbor of New York, capturing the cramped decks, seasick passengers, and the strange camaraderie that forms amid storms and celebrations. From the rhythm of a lively shipboard dance to the eerie glow of phosphorescent seas, the opening pages blend vivid detail with a wry sense of humor, inviting listeners to feel the sway of the Atlantic and the anticipation of a new world beyond the horizon.

Once ashore, the narrative shifts to the harsh realities of frontier life, where the promise of boundless sport meets the stark solitude of untamed forests. The author paints a candid portrait of early American settlers, their relentless toil, and the unforgiving challenges of hunting in swamps and mountains. His reflections warn that the romance of “wild sports” often masks a grueling existence, offering a nuanced glimpse into the hopes and hardships of those daring enough to chase adventure in the far West.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~11 hours (636K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images available at The Internet Archive)

Release date

2016-04-19

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Friedrich Gerstäcker

Friedrich Gerstäcker

1816–1872

Drawn from years of hard travel and firsthand adventure, his stories brought 19th-century frontiers, emigrant journeys, and far-off landscapes vividly to life. He wrote with the pace of a born storyteller and the eye of someone who had actually been there.

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