
John Merriam is the picture‑perfect principal of a tiny Illinois high school, admired for his moral sermons and spotless reputation. Beneath his respectable exterior, however, he feels a restless hunger for something beyond the predictable rhythms of rural life. One evening he slips away to the dazzling Peacock Cabaret in Chicago, where the lights, music, and a mysterious waiter known only as “No. 73” draw him into a world far removed from his Sunday‑school lectures.
That chance encounter sets off a chain of far‑cical misadventures, pulling the earnest educator into schemes involving impostors, social clubs, and a bewildering cast of strangers. As Merriam navigates the glittering yet treacherous urban scene, his well‑meaning intentions clash with unexpected obligations, hinting at a tangled romance that could rewrite his notion of duty. Listeners will be delighted by the witty twists and the charming clash between small‑town virtue and big‑city intrigue.
Language
en
Duration
~7 hours (459K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2015-04-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
b. 1881
A little-known early 20th-century American novelist, Max McConn wrote lively popular fiction with a strong feel for romance, social intrigue, and city-versus-small-town contrasts. His surviving work suggests a storyteller interested in fast-moving plots and the complications of modern life.
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