Audiobook: Up the River
- Download 00 β Preface audio
- Download 01 β In Captain Boomsbyβs Salon audio
- Download 02 β Four Thousand Dollars audio
- Download 03 β Adieu to the Boomsbys audio
- Download 04 β Nick Boomsby has Aspirations audio
- Download 05 β The Strange Movement of the Islander audio
- Download 06 β A Lively Chase audio
- Download 07 β A Fog off the Florida Coast audio
- Download 08 β A Port in a Storm audio
- Download 09 β A Visit from an Old Acquaintance audio
- Download 10 β Intelligence of the Islander audio
- Download 11 β Difficult Navigation audio
- Download 12 β The Calamity on French Reef audio
- Download 13 β A Night Lost in the Storm audio
- Download 14 β Looking for the Islander audio
- Download 15 β A Partial Solution of the Mystery audio
- Download 16 β Across the Gulf of Mexico audio
- Download 17 β The Sylvania in Ambush audio
- Download 18 β How Nick Boomsby managed his Case audio
- Download 19 β A Search for the Lost Treasure audio
- Download 20 β The Theory and the Facts audio
- Download 21 β Up the Mississippi audio
- Download 22 β The Islander in a Bad Fix audio
- Download 23 β An Embarrassing Situation audio
- Download 24 β A Crevasse on the Mississippi audio
- Download 25 β Sailing Across the Fields audio
- Download 26 β A Desperate Struggle with the Rushing Waters audio
- Download 27 β The Planter and his Family audio
- Download 28 β A Distinguished Passenger audio
- Download 29 β Up the River for many Days audio
- Download 30 β Up another River and Home Again audio
Audiobooks Genres
Author
Description
Up the River is the sixth and last of βThe Great Western Series.β The events of the story occur on the coast of Florida, in the Gulf of Mexico, and on the Mississippi River. The volume and the series close with the return of the hero, by a route not often taken by tourists, to his home in Michigan. His voyaging on the ocean, the Great Lakes, and the Father of Waters, is finished for the present; but the writer believes that his principal character has grown wiser and better since he was first introduced to the reader. He has made mistakes of judgment, but whatever of example and inspiration he may impart to the reader will be that of a true and noble boy, with no vices to disfigure his character, and no low aims to lead him from βthe straight and narrow pathβ of duty.
Dorchester, Mass., June 1, 1881
(Introduction by Author)
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