
audiobook
by D. Thomas (Daniel Thomas) Curtin
A weary traveler steps off a train bound for a war‑torn nation, his mind torn between dread and resolve. The narrative opens in the gray winter of 1915, as he navigates the stark, bureaucratic maze of German border control. Every suitcase is dismantled, every piece of paper examined, and the protagonist’s ordinary belongings—chocolate, liniment, a few reference books— become objects of suspicion. The tense, almost theatrical interrogation by uniformed officers and a sharp‑tongued interpreter draws the listener into the claustrophobic world of wartime suspicion.
Through vivid detail the story captures the paradox of ordinary life pressed against the backdrop of conflict: the smell of apple cakes in a Dutch station, the clang of mechanized inspection, the cold stare of soldiers who seem to read his thoughts. As he is shuffled from room to room, the listener feels the weight of each question—birthplace, contacts, language skills—mirroring the larger anxieties of anyone forced to cross hostile frontiers. The first act ends with his passport returned, but his essential papers sealed away, hinting at the uncertain path that lies ahead.
Language
en
Duration
~8 hours (492K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-05-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1886–1963
An American reporter and author, he wrote from close to the fault lines of the early 20th century, turning firsthand wartime travel into vivid narrative. His best-known work follows his journeys through Central Europe during World War I.
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