
The Backwoods Boy; or, The Boyhood and Manhood of Abraham Lincoln
0Listen FreeFree AI audiobook with natural voice. No signup required.
About This Book
Leather Binding on Spine and Corners with Golden leaf printing on spine. This book is printed in black & white, Sewing binding for longer life, where the book block is actually sewn (smythe sewn/section sewn) with thread before binding which results in a more durable type of binding. Reprinted in 2022 with the help of original edition published long back 1883. As this book is reprinted from a very old book, there could be some missing or flawed pages. If it is multi vo Resized as per current standards. We expect that you will understand our compulsion with such books. 336 The backwoods boy; or...
Chapters (329)
- T h e B a c k wo o d s B o y OR THE BOYHOOD AND MANHOOD OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN
- PREFACE.
- CONTENTS.
- THE BACKWOODS BOY.
- CHAPTER I. THE LOG-CABIN.
- CHAPTER II. THE NEW MOTHER.
- CHAPTER III. ABE AND HIS FAMILY.
- CHAPTER IV. ABE’S SCHOOLING.
- CHAPTER V. ABE AND HIS NEIGHBORS.
- CHAPTER VI. A RIVER TRIP.
- CHAPTER VII. LINCOLN AS A CLERK
- CHAPTER VIII. IN THE BLACK HAWK CAMPAIGN.
- CHAPTER IX. IN THE LEGISLATURE.
- CHAPTER X. A CASE IN COURT
- CHAPTER XI. MR. LINCOLN FORMS TWO PARTNERSHIPS
- CHAPTER XII. THE LAWYER IN HIS OFFICE AND AT HOME.
- CHAPTER XIII. THE RAIL-SPLITTER ENTERS CONGRESS.
- CHAPTER XIV. THE FIRST SPEECH IN CONGRESS.
- CHAPTER XV. MR. LINCOLN’S FAMILY.
- CHAPTER XVI. THE SENATORIAL CAMPAIGN.
- CHAPTER XVII. THE TWO GIANTS.
- CHAPTER XVIII. ILLINOIS DECLARES FOR THE RAIL-SPLITTER.
- TWO RAILS
- CHAPTER XIX. NOMINATED FOR PRESIDENT.
- CHAPTER XX. FAREWELL TO SPRINGFIELD.
- CHAPTER XXI. A VISIT TO MR. LINCOLN.
- CHAPTER XXII. THE INAUGURATION.
- CHAPTER XXIII. THE WAR BEGINS.
- THE VOICE OF THE NORTH.
- THE VOICE OF THE SOUTH.
- CHAPTER XXIV. MR. LINCOLN IN THE WHITE HOUSE.
- CHAPTER XXV. MR. LINCOLN AND THE LITTLE BOY—A GROUP OF ANECDOTES.
- CHAPTER XXVI. MR. LINCOLN’S HUMANITY.
- Another Case.
- CHAPTER XXVII. ANECDOTES OF MR. LINCOLN.
- The President and the Paymaster.
- The Interviewer.
- How Mr. Lincoln secured a Ride.
- The President’s Influence.
- The German Lieutenant.
- A Pass for Richmond.
- Mr. Lincoln and the Preacher.
- Mr. Lincoln and his Advisers.
- CHAPTER XXVIII. PRESIDENT LINCOLN AS A RELIGIOUS MAN.
- CHAPTER XXIX. EMANCIPATING THE SLAVES.
- CHAPTER XXX. ELECTED FOR A SECOND TERM.
- CHAPTER XXXI. THE SPEECH AT GETTYSBURG.
- CHAPTER XXXII. THE CURTAIN FALLS.
- CHAPTER XXXIII. MR. HERNDON’S ESTIMATE OF MR. LINCOLN.
- CHAPTER XXXIV. MR. LINCOLN’S FAVORITE POEM.
- {4}
- {5}
- {7}
- {9}
- {10}
- {11}
- {12}
- {13}
- {14}
- {15}
- {16}
- {17}
- {18}
- {19}
- {20}
- {21}
- {22}
- {23}
- {24}
- {25}
- {27}
- {28}
- {29}
- {30}
- {31}
- {32}
- {33}
- {35}
- {36}
- {37}
- {38}
- {39}
- {40}
- {41}
- {42}
- {44}
- {45}
- {46}
- {47}
- {48}
- {49}
- {50}
- {51}
- {52}
- {53}
- {54}
- {55}
- {56}
- {58}
- {59}
- {60}
- {62}
- {63}
- {64}
- {65}
- {66}
- {67}
- {68}
- {70}
- {71}
- {72}
- {73}
- {74}
- {75}
- {76}
- {77}
- {78}
- {79}
- {82}
- {83}
- {84}
- {86}
- {88}
- {89}
- {90}
- {91}
- {92}
- {93}
- {94}
- {96}
- {98}
- {99}
- {100}
- {101}
- {102}
- {103}
- {104}
- {106}
- {107}
- {108}
- {109}
- {110}
- {111}
- {112}
- {115}
- {116}
- {117}
- {118}
- {119}
- {120}
- {121}
- {122}
- {123}
- {124}
- {125}
- {126}
- {127}
- {128}
- {129}
- {130}
- {131}
- {132}
- {133}
- {134}
- {135}
- {136}
- {137}
- {138}
- {139}
- {140}
- {141}
- {143}
- {144}
- {145}
- {146}
- {147}
- {148}
- {149}
- {150}
- {151}
- {152}
- {153}
- {154}
- {156}
- {157}
- {158}
- {159}
- {160}
- {161}
- {162}
- {163}
- {166}
- {167}
- {168}
- {169}
- {170}
- {171}
- {172}
- {173}
- {174}
- {175}
- {176}
- {177}
- {178}
- {179}
- {180}
- {181}
- {182}
- {184}
- {185}
- {186}
- {188}
- {189}
- {190}
- {191}
- {192}
- {193}
- {194}
- {195}
- {196}
- {197}
- {198}
- {200}
- {201}
- {203}
- {204}
- {205}
- {206}
- {207}
- {209}
- {210}
- {211}
- {212}
- {213}
- {214}
- {215}
- {216}
- {217}
- {218}
- {219}
- {220}
- {221}
- {222}
- {223}
- {224}
- {225}
- {226}
- {227}
- {228}
- {229}
- {230}
- {231}
- {232}
- {233}
- {234}
- {235}
- {236}
- {237}
- {239}
- {240}
- {241}
- {242}
- {243}
- {244}
- {245}
- {247}
- {248}
- {249}
- {250}
- {251}
- {252}
- {253}
- {254}
- {255}
- {256}
- {257}
- {258}
- {259}
- {260}
- {262}
- {263}
- {264}
- {265}
- {266}
- {267}
- {268}
- {269}
- {270}
- {271}
- {274}
- {275}
- {276}
- {278}
- {279}
- {280}
- {281}
- {282}
- {283}
- {284}
- {285}
- {286}
- {287}
- {288}
- {289}
- {290}
- {292}
- {293}
- {294}
- {295}
- {297}
- {298}
- {299}
- {300}
- {301}
- {302}
- {303}
- {304}
- {305}
- {306}
- {307}
- {308}
- {309}
- {310}
- {311}
- {312}
- {313}
- {314}
- {315}
- {316}
How to Listen
- 1. Click "Listen Free" above
- 2. The book opens in CastReader's browser reader
- 3. Click the play button — AI narration starts with word highlighting
- 4. Use "Send to Phone" to continue listening on your phone
More by Horatio Alger Jr.
FAQ
Is this audiobook really free?
Yes. "The Backwoods Boy; or, The Boyhood and Manhood of Abraham Lincoln" is a public domain work from Project Gutenberg. CastReader converts it to audio using AI text-to-speech for free. No account or payment needed.
What does the AI voice sound like?
CastReader uses Kokoro TTS, a natural-sounding AI voice. It handles punctuation, names, and dialogue naturally. Most listeners forget it's AI after a few minutes.
Can I listen on my phone?
Yes. Open the book, then use "Send to Phone" to stream audio to your phone via Telegram. No app download needed.



