
In the humid heart of early‑twentieth‑century New Orleans, a modest café called Chaudière’s offers a refuge of cracked marble tables, gumbo‑filled pots, and the clink of cheap claret. It is a favorite haunt of the city’s night‑shift reporters, a place where the scent of sea‑salted crab mingles with the rustle of ink‑stained notebooks. Here we meet Kenneth Griswold, a lanky, red‑bearded writer whose recent string of disappointments has left him gaunt, and his old acquaintance, Bainbridge, a buoyant journalist bound for a tropical assignment that promises adventure and a steady paycheck.
Their farewell dinner becomes a tense exchange of envy and frustration, as Griswold bitterly observes the gap between those who can afford three meals a day and those who cannot. Bainbridge, eager to celebrate his new posting, attempts to lift the mood, but the conversation soon turns to the stark realities of survival in a city where opportunity is as fleeting as the steam rising from the café’s kitchen. The tension hints at choices Griswold must soon confront, setting the stage for a struggle that reaches far beyond the walls of Chaudière’s.
Language
en
Duration
~10 hours (633K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Sam Whitehead, Suzanne Shell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2006-10-04
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1856–1930
Best known for brisk, entertaining novels of the American West and the railroad age, this early 20th-century storyteller turned business, politics, and frontier change into lively popular fiction.
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