Doors of the Night
Frank L. Packard
Read by Delmar H Dolbier
New York City, 1922—Murder—half-million dollar robbery—false accusation—secret passage—the underworld—a mystery woman—a masked man—a crooked lawyer—stolen jewels—a forged will. . .
“Every hour . . . held a surer promise, not only of desperate peril to himself, but a promise that he would find himself launched in a sea of crime, of shuddering things, of murder, of blood, of sordid viciousness, of hate.”
- Summary by Delmar H. Dolbier (10 hr 10 min)
Chapters
Across the Threshold | 29:35 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
The Crime | 28:10 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
Into the Underworld | 28:16 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
Alias The Rat | 19:34 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
The Second-Hand Dealer | 25:39 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
A Midnight Visitor | 11:16 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
Whispering Shadows | 16:20 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
A Leash Is Slipped | 16:33 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
Behind the Door | 11:53 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
The Pieces of a Puzzle | 29:06 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
The Back Room at Jerry's | 27:10 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
A Clue | 23:31 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
The Cipher Message | 32:00 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
The Robbery | 17:34 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
The Alibi | 28:28 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
Twenty-Four Hours Later | 21:05 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
The Man with the Crutch | 24:17 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
Mirrored Years | 27:35 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
A Hole in the Wall | 17:24 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
The Cat's-Paw | 27:57 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
Without Mercy | 22:32 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
The Fight | 29:16 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
The Rendezvous | 27:29 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
Against Time | 21:33 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
The Old Warehouse | 16:31 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
The Last Portal | 29:36 | Read by Delmar H Dolbier |
Reviews
A LibriVox Listener
Loved all the different voices the reader put on made it easy to follow well read
nora kawachi
a bit florid, but probably a good example of its type
Ms. Elizabeth
Aye! Aye! Aye! Some of the voices he chose to use were difficult to get thru and were hard to understand. story seems to drag and I did get lost several times.