The Green Rust
Edgar Wallace
Leído por Don W. Jenkins





A millionaire is taken suddenly ill, and sensing his mortality, he asks his attorney to do him one last favor—to find and secretly watch over his missing niece, the daughter of his profligate deceased sister. This niece at the appropriate time would become heir to his millions. However, the millionaire is mysteriously murdered, stabbed to death in his sick bed. Oliva Cresswell, the unsuspecting niece, has been a cashier in a large West End store for five years when she meets a Mr. Beale, a self-described wheat merchant, is attacked in her flat and rescued by this Mr. Beale, is offered a job as his confidential secretary, refuses him, is unexplainably sacked and finds herself in need of his offer. The mysteries multiply and deepen as the story proceeds. (Introduction by Don W. Jenkins) (8 hr 2 min)
Capítulos
01 - The Passing of John Millinborn | 14:30 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
02 - The Drunken Mr. Beale | 19:58 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
03 - Punsonby's Discharge an Employee | 19:31 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
04 - The Letters That Were Not There | 15:35 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
05 - The Man with the Big Head | 14:19 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
06 - Mr. Scobbs of Red Horse Valley | 15:49 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
07 - Plain Words from Mr. Beale | 16:35 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
08 - The Crime of the Grand Alliance | 14:36 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
09 - A Crime Against the World | 20:05 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
10 - A Fruitless Search | 14:50 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
11 - The House Near Staines | 16:12 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
12 - Introducing Parson Homo | 14:33 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
13 - At Deans Folly | 14:51 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
14 - Mr. Beale Suggests Marriage | 14:46 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
15 - The Good Herr Stardt | 15:12 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
16 - The Pawn Ticket | 14:50 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
17 - The Jew of Cracow | 18:18 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
18 - Bridgers Breaks Loose | 15:14 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
19 - Oliva Is Willing | 14:06 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
20 - The Marriage | 11:02 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
21 - Beale Sees White | 15:51 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
22 - Hilda Glaum Leads the Way | 14:03 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
23 - At the Doctor's Flat | 13:38 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
24 - The Green Rust Factory | 12:14 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
25 - The Last Man at the Bench | 12:37 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
26 - The Secret of the Green Rust | 14:58 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
27 - A Scheme to Starve the World | 13:34 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
28 - The Coming of Dr. Milsom | 14:02 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
29 - The Lost Code | 12:49 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
30 - The Watch | 12:29 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
31 - A Cornchandler's Bill | 7:36 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
32 - The End of Van Heerden | 23:21 | Leído por Don W. Jenkins |
Reseñas
Funny and fun adventure





ListeninginChicago
After the first two chapters, I was ready to give it up as an overdone melodrama. Then I read Mike's review and decided to hang on a bit longer. I'm glad I did. Yes, it's full of stereotypes and melodrama, but it's also funny and catches you into the story. Take it for what it is and it is a enjoyable listen. Don Jenkens read this as a solo project and did a very good job of fitting his reading style to the material.
I enjoyed this story - kept me listening





mikezane
The story opens with a murder under mysterious circumstances. Change of scene to an apartment complex where Olivia Crestwell lives. She has a good job, and a nice gentleman neighbor who shows a lot of interest in her. Suddenly, Olivia loses her job with no information given to her as to why. Coming to her rescue is the icky Mr Beale, a different neighbor known for his drunkeness. He warns her to be cautious, but Olivia just can't seem to get into her mind that things might not quite be as they appear. I have to admit, Olivia kind of annoyed me with her tendency to be too trusting and unsure of herself. The story overall was really good, and kept me listening. The reader did a nice job with voices and inflections. All in all, it was a very good read.
Pretty good tale





Ancient Aunt
This book is set in the 1920s, a few years after the end of WWI. It features a particularly nasty German nationalist who has concocted a diabolical scheme to wreak revenge against the Allies for extracting financial reparations through the terms of the Treaty of Versailles. There is an American Secret Service agent and a plucky British woman at the heart of this story of international intrigue. Quite interesting and complex plot. Don Jenkins, the Librivox volunteer reader, is his usual sparkling self :)
Audio Theater





Mich Seg
This reader is an artist. 10 stars and a rhubarb pie.The story was good too. The villains are over the top maniacs which is accurate and realistic if you compare them with real life super villains. The love story that develops is the icing on the cake. These events are disturbingly reflective of some of the current events of our time, minus the heroism and patriotism of the past generations.
Not the best Wallace





picfixer
More adventure than mystery. Though written in 1919, it is in an overly-wordy, late-Victorian style reflecting social values which at the time were twenty years out of date. Often repetitious, which makes me think it might have first appeared in serialized form. Good reader.
enjoyed the reader of a slow paced story





Jon Mark Wilson
It is a relief to read a suspenseful situation of global terrorism without hyped up violence, where the romantic tension is chivalrous rather than ribald. Still, it's several hours long with few moments of high drama.
Entertaining





Angels Walk
This is the 1st Edgar Wallace book I've listened to, and I enjoyed every moment. It's perfect, light listening, and appropriate for all ages. I prefer single reader projects, and found this, just great.





A LibriVox Listener
Five stars for a story that has both political and scientific overtones and five plus for the lively and very clear reading by Don W. Jenkins. Thank you!