Arizona Nights
Stewart Edward White
Read by A. E. Maroney
Arizona Nights is a collection of tales from the American West as told by those who took part in them. (Summary by Adam E. Maroney) (5 hr 39 min)
Chapters
| The Ole Virginia | 14:46 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Emigrants | 22:45 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Remittance Man | 27:02 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Cattle Rustlers | 22:51 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Drive | 18:47 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| Cutting Out | 17:17 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| A Corner In Horses | 18:52 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Corral Branding | 11:18 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Old Timer | 6:07 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Texas Rangers | 4:40 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Sailor with One Hand | 11:56 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Murder On the Beach | 10:13 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| Buried Treasure | 13:52 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Chewed Sugar Cane | 6:15 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Calabash Stew | 8:56 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Honk-Honk Breed | 18:51 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Cattle Rustlers | 7:43 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Man with Nerve | 4:47 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Agreement | 6:29 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Accomplishment | 4:48 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Passing of the Colt's Forty-Five | 8:17 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Shapes of Illusion | 5:53 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Paper A Year Old | 4:05 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| Dreams | 5:18 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Arrival | 6:40 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Wagon Tire | 6:57 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| Estrella | 9:07 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Round-Up | 3:43 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Long Trail | 6:11 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Discovery | 4:49 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Capture | 6:17 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| In the Arroyo | 3:05 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Rawhide | 5:20 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
| The Desert | 5:52 | Read by A. E. Maroney |
Reviews
Interesting Story of Awakenings
Elf
I disagree that the last chapter is sad. I don’t see it as an ending of dreams, but as the awakening of a man, to the fact that his are not the only thoughts and dreams, and that other people are not simply material for his own little world. It may be a hard and harsh lesson, but it is nowhere near the end. It is, rather, an opportunity for a new beginning, in which other people matter as much as he does.
great tales
Suzanne
Well-written and very well read. Loved some of the cowboy “tall tales”. The last story was so sad: the destruction of dreams by reality,
great read and reader!
Anewelding
I totally enjoyed this book. great stories that seem to meld into each other. great narrator!!!
A LibriVox Listener
Americans who actually have roots in our forming culture will take sober pleasure from these tales.
A LibriVox Listener
great reader and interesting stories! listen for the description of a Kentucky breakfast :-)
Good listen!
Ryan Lentsch
Very interesting story’s of old western times!
ending was heartbreaking. but still a fine book indeed
Preacher333
A LibriVox Listener
Good reader. Interesting approach to storytelling.