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The Spider

Gelesen von Don W. Jenkins

(4,146 Sterne; 103 Bewertungen)

Arthur Vernon, member of the Athenian club and member of “society,” has a secret. His father has died and left him destitute, so he has begun a private investigation agency under the name “Nemo.” It would be disastrous if this were known among his associates at the club, and especially if his intended in-laws found out. But he is quite sure no one else knows, that is until his old college classmate, Constantine Maunders, visits him with a proposition he can’t refuse. Maunders knows all, and he wants to be made a partner in the agency, providing “Nemo” with black-mail worthy information on other people in society in return for a share of the financial rewards for their silence. Vernon is appalled, particularly as “Nemo” is engaged in solving a high profile blackmail case. These are the beginning of Vernons conundrums as the clues unfold. - Summary by Don W. Jenkins (10 hr 7 min)

Chapters

A Possible Partnership

26:23

Read by Don W. Jenkins

A Confidential Communication

29:48

Read by Don W. Jenkins

How the Trap Was Set

30:39

Read by Don W. Jenkins

Who Was Caught in the Trap

34:57

Read by Don W. Jenkins

After the Tragedy

21:55

Read by Don W. Jenkins

Two Conversations

31:52

Read by Don W. Jenkins

Lady Corsoon's Appeal

26:24

Read by Don W. Jenkins

The Grief of Ida

29:29

Read by Don W. Jenkins

Witchcraft

27:45

Read by Don W. Jenkins

Mystery

22:25

Read by Don W. Jenkins

The Needle in the Haystack

25:32

Read by Don W. Jenkins

A Tempting Offer

27:01

Read by Don W. Jenkins

The Bazaar

24:47

Read by Don W. Jenkins

Run to Earth

30:43

Read by Don W. Jenkins

Face to Face

25:22

Read by Don W. Jenkins

The Search

24:24

Read by Don W. Jenkins

In the Train

22:48

Read by Don W. Jenkins

At Bowderstyke

31:22

Read by Don W. Jenkins

A Bold Offer

28:16

Read by Don W. Jenkins

Gerby Hall

32:21

Read by Don W. Jenkins

Justice

29:03

Read by Don W. Jenkins

The End of it All

23:45

Read by Don W. Jenkins

Bewertungen

ONE OF HUME'S BEST

(5 Sterne)

A fine tale of chicanery, crime, and cleverness. There are plenty of villains and prigs to go around, as well as several naive persons. Then, there is the colonel who succeeds despite his military hardheadedness. It finishes with satisfaction for all, a Hume trademark. All in all, a pretty good read.

(1 Sterne)

one of my favorite authors and usually I can tolerate Mr. Jenkins, but this time he's used voice that hurt my ears. I would recommend a different microphone or no voices. I do like his regular voice.

(3 Sterne)

Loved the plot (author’s usual) and the narration (DWJ) Recommended.

Could have been

(3 Sterne)

The story was pretty good, if very predictable, but the other reviewers are right: the reader's voices are very badly done and make it difficult to simply enjoy the story.

(4 Sterne)

Thank you Mr. Jenkins for a very lively narration, of a long story... it took some real effort to stay so diligent. as always thank you LibirVox.

(2 Sterne)

my least favorite Hume story. probably because of Jenkins' cartoonist voices made it difficult to follow the plot. I usually like his narrations but I feel like his voice is not suited for this type of work.