Into the Primitive

audiobook

Into the Primitive

by Robert Ames Bennet

EN·~5 hours

Chapters

Description

Aboard a steamer bound for the distant coasts of East Africa, a tightly knit party of travelers—an American engineer, a polished English diplomat, a protective lady of society, and the spirited Miss Leslie—navigate a maze of etiquette, rivalry, and hidden attraction. Their cramped quarters become a stage for witty confrontations, nervous flirtations, and the restless clink of glasses, while the looming presence of the ship’s authority adds an undercurrent of tension. As they sail past Port Natal and into the treacherous Mozambique Channel, the veneer of civility begins to fray under the weight of the sea’s restless temperament.

When a sudden cyclone shatters the vessel’s calm, the passengers are thrust into a chaotic scramble for survival, clinging to wrecked boats and battered decks as the storm rips the ship apart. Amid the turmoil, a reluctant hero emerges, fighting drunken stupor and fierce waves to protect those around him, only to find himself cast ashore on a hostile shore of breakers and coral. The aftermath leaves the survivors bruised, bewildered, and bound together by a shared ordeal that promises further trials on an unforgiving, primitive landscape.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (344K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.fadedpage.net

Release date

2010-10-25

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Robert Ames Bennet

Robert Ames Bennet

1870–1954

A prolific early 20th-century American novelist, he wrote fast-moving adventure and frontier stories, along with imaginative tales that helped shape the pulp era. His work often blends rugged outdoor action with romance, mystery, and a strong feel for the American West.

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