The Black Cat Vol. 01 No. 08 May 1896
Various
Read by LibriVox Volunteers
The Black Cat (1895-1922) was a monthly literary magazine, publishing original short stories, often about uncanny or fantastical topics. Many writers were largely unknown, but some famous authors also wrote original material for this magazine.
This is the eighth issue with the following 5 stories:
"For fame, money, or love ?" by Rodrigues Ottolengui (1861-1937): a piano composition reveals the final thoughts of a musician
''A No Account Niggah'', by Leonard M. Prince: a clumsy new recruit proves his worth when it matters most
"A hundred thousand dollar trance", by Eugene Shade Bisbee (1864-1933): a renowned hypnotist proposes a rather shocking experiment at a club meeting
"The misfit gown", by Elmer Cook Rice: witness the heated voting campaign for the presidency of a woman's charity club
"The shifting sand", by C. C. van Orsdall: the tragic story of man's life-long obsession to find back a treasure chamber
- Summary by Sonia (2 hr 1 min)
Chapters
For fame, money, or love ? by R. Ottolengui | 28:32 | Read by NarratorJ |
''A No Account Niggah'', by Leonard M. Prince | 20:47 | Read by Phil Chenevert |
A hundred thousand dollar trance, by Eugene Shade Bisbee | 19:04 | Read by Sonia |
The misfit gown, by Elmer Cook Rice | 30:06 | Read by Julie Burks |
The shifting sand, by C. C. van Orsdall | 23:12 | Read by ToddHW |