A Mayfair Magician; a Romance of Criminal Science
George Griffith
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
Our narrator, a researcher, finds himself snowed in at a Scottish prison. The resident doctor, an observer of criminal psychology, offers him hospitality and entertainment in the form of this story, an account of the bizarre case of a strange prisoner in motorcycle goggles, why he must wear them, and what he did to earn a life sentence. - Summary by A. Gramour (8 hr 35 min)
Chapters
Prologue | 7:26 | Read by Dan Gurzynski |
Chapter I | 17:53 | Read by Dan Gurzynski |
Chapter II | 13:13 | Read by Dan Gurzynski |
Chapter III | 15:04 | Read by James K. White |
Chapter IV | 18:10 | Read by James K. White |
Chapter V | 19:56 | Read by James K. White |
Chapter VI | 17:14 | Read by Kristine Bekere |
Chapter VII | 17:19 | Read by Kristine Bekere |
Chapter VIII | 18:15 | Read by Kristine Bekere |
Chapter IX | 15:19 | Read by ToddHW |
Chapter X | 14:21 | Read by ToddHW |
Chapter XI | 15:45 | Read by Campbell Schelp |
Chapter XII | 16:32 | Read by Campbell Schelp |
Chapter XIII | 16:08 | Read by James K. White |
Chapter XIV | 16:27 | Read by James K. White |
Chapter XV | 15:47 | Read by James K. White |
Chapter XVI | 13:53 | Read by Peter Block |
Chapter XVII | 16:50 | Read by DavidReader |
Chapter XVIII | 17:24 | Read by DavidReader |
Chapter XIX | 11:41 | Read by Jacob Paul Starr |
Chapter XX | 22:54 | Read by Jacob Paul Starr |
Chapter XXI | 14:16 | Read by Jacob Paul Starr |
Chapter XXII | 21:38 | Read by Alirrae |
Chapter XXIII | 14:16 | Read by ToddHW |
Chapter XXIV | 14:27 | Read by Aaron White |
Chapter XXV | 15:27 | Read by Aaron White |
Chapter XXVI | 20:29 | Read by Aaron White |
Chapter XXVII | 12:02 | Read by Aaron White |
Chapter XXVIII | 13:40 | Read by David Bear |
Chapter XXIX | 16:03 | Read by Frirgan |
Chapter XXX | 12:06 | Read by Frirgan |
Chapter XXXI | 16:46 | Read by Frirgan |
Epilogue | 6:41 | Read by James K. White |
Reviews
I was interested in this story
jtrev
But, I cannot understand some of the chapters because they are poorly read or poorly recorded.