
The Clevedon Case
Free AI audiobook with natural voice. No signup required.
About This Book
Quoting from a "teaser" on the flyleaf:The well-known authority on criminology, Dennis Holt, inherited a house in a remote village, the sort of place in which, to quote himself, “nothing ever happens.” One night at fifty-three minutes past eleven (he was always meticulously accurate about time), his attention was attracted by a peremptory tapping on the window pane. A moment later, the lower sash was slowly pushed up and a young girl appeared.“Let me in!” she whispered. “Please—I have hurt myself.”That was the beginning of a bewildering series of happenings in the life of Dennis Holt. Suddenly...
Chapters (363)
- THE CLEVEDON : : CASE : :
- CONTENTS
- CHAPTER I A MIDNIGHT VISITOR
- CHAPTER II THE TRAGEDY AT WHITE TOWERS
- CHAPTER III A MEETING IN THE DARK
- CHAPTER IV THE SILVER-HEADED HATPIN
- CHAPTER V KITTY CLEVEDON AND RONALD THOYNE
- CHAPTER VI A NEW SENSATION
- CHAPTER VII EVIDENCE AT THE INQUEST
- CHAPTER VIII THE STORY OF A QUARREL
- CHAPTER IX WHAT KITTY CLEVEDON SAID
- CHAPTER X AN INVITATION FROM LADY CLEVEDON
- CHAPTER XI A VISIT FROM RONALD THOYNE
- CHAPTER XII RONALD THOYNE DISAPPEARS
- CHAPTER XIII THE VICAR’S STORY
- CHAPTER XIV KITTY SENDS A TELEGRAM
- CHAPTER XV ON RONALD THOYNE’S YACHT
- CHAPTER XVI THE MYSTERY OF BILLY CLEVEDON
- CHAPTER XVII MORE ABOUT BILLY CLEVEDON
- CHAPTER XVIII THE ANONYMOUS LETTERS
- CHAPTER XIX THE HAIRPIN CLUE
- CHAPTER XX STILL MORE ABOUT BILLY CLEVEDON
- CHAPTER XXI WHY TULMIN BLACKMAILED CLEVEDON
- CHAPTER XXII MORE ANONYMOUS LETTERS
- CHAPTER XXIII TULMIN’S QUEER STORY
- CHAPTER XXIV THE WRATH OF RONALD THOYNE
- CHAPTER XXV THE STORY OF MARY GRAINGER
- CHAPTER XXVI NORA LEPLEY’S EXPLANATION
- CHAPTER XXVII WHO KILLED PHILIP CLEVEDON
- p. 4
- p. 5
- 9
- 23
- 34
- 45
- 59
- 70
- 80
- 94
- 105
- 117
- 129
- 145
- 154
- 163
- 172
- 185
- 193
- p. 6
- 205
- 217
- 227
- 239
- 251
- 263
- 275
- 286
- 297
- 306
- p. 9
- p. 10
- p. 11
- p. 12
- p. 13
- p. 14
- p. 15
- p. 16
- p. 17
- p. 18
- p. 19
- p. 20
- p. 21
- p. 22
- p. 23
- p. 24
- p. 25
- p. 26
- p. 27
- p. 28
- p. 29
- p. 30
- p. 31
- p. 32
- p. 33
- p. 34
- p. 35
- p. 36
- p. 37
- p. 38
- p. 39
- p. 40
- p. 41
- p. 42
- p. 43
- p. 44
- p. 45
- p. 46
- p. 47
- p. 48
- p. 49
- p. 50
- p. 51
- p. 52
- p. 53
- p. 54
- p. 55
- p. 56
- p. 57
- p. 58
- p. 59
- p. 60
- p. 61
- p. 62
- p. 63
- p. 64
- p. 65
- p. 66
- p. 67
- p. 68
- p. 69
- p. 70
- p. 71
- p. 72
- p. 73
- p. 74
- p. 75
- p. 76
- p. 77
- p. 78
- p. 79
- p. 80
- p. 81
- p. 82
- p. 83
- p. 84
- p. 85
- p. 86
- p. 87
- p. 88
- p. 89
- p. 90
- p. 91
- p. 92
- p. 93
- p. 94
- p. 95
- p. 96
- p. 97
- p. 98
- p. 99
- p. 100
- p. 101
- p. 102
- p. 103
- p. 104
- p. 105
- p. 106
- p. 107
- p. 108
- p. 109
- p. 110
- p. 111
- p. 112
- p. 113
- p. 114
- p. 115
- p. 116
- p. 117
- p. 118
- p. 119
- p. 120
- p. 121
- p. 122
- p. 123
- p. 124
- p. 125
- p. 126
- p. 127
- p. 128
- p. 129
- p. 130
- p. 131
- p. 132
- p. 133
- p. 134
- p. 135
- p. 136
- p. 137
- p. 138
- p. 139
- p. 140
- p. 141
- p. 142
- p. 143
- p. 144
- p. 145
- p. 146
- p. 147
- p. 148
- p. 149
- p. 150
- p. 151
- p. 152
- p. 153
- p. 154
- p. 155
- p. 156
- p. 157
- p. 158
- p. 159
- p. 160
- p. 161
- p. 162
- p. 163
- p. 164
- p. 165
- p. 166
- p. 167
- p. 168
- p. 169
- p. 170
- p. 171
- p. 172
- p. 173
- p. 174
- p. 175
- p. 176
- p. 177
- p. 178
- p. 179
- p. 180
- p. 181
- p. 182
- p. 183
- p. 184
- p. 185
- p. 186
- p. 187
- p. 188
- p. 189
- p. 190
- p. 191
- p. 192
- p. 193
- p. 194
- p. 195
- p. 196
- p. 197
- p. 198
- p. 199
- p. 200
- p. 201
- p. 202
- p. 203
- p. 204
- p. 205
- p. 206
- p. 207
- p. 208
- p. 209
- p. 210
- p. 211
- p. 212
- p. 213
- p. 214
- p. 215
- p. 216
- p. 217
- p. 218
- p. 219
- p. 220
- p. 221
- p. 222
- p. 223
- p. 224
- p. 225
- p. 226
- p. 227
- p. 228
- p. 229
- p. 230
- p. 231
- p. 232
- p. 233
- p. 234
- p. 235
- p. 236
- p. 237
- p. 238
- p. 239
- p. 240
- p. 241
- p. 242
- p. 243
- p. 244
- p. 245
- p. 246
- p. 247
- p. 248
- p. 249
- p. 250
- p. 251
- p. 252
- p. 253
- p. 254
- p. 255
- p. 256
- p. 257
- p. 258
- p. 259
- p. 260
- p. 261
- p. 262
- p. 263
- p. 264
- p. 265
- p. 266
- p. 267
- p. 268
- p. 269
- p. 270
- p. 271
- p. 272
- p. 273
- p. 274
- p. 275
- p. 276
- p. 277
- p. 278
- p. 279
- p. 280
- p. 281
- p. 282
- p. 283
- p. 284
- p. 285
- p. 286
- p. 287
- p. 288
- p. 289
- p. 290
- p. 291
- p. 292
- p. 293
- p. 294
- p. 295
- p. 296
- p. 297
- p. 298
- p. 299
- p. 300
- p. 301
- p. 302
- p. 303
- p. 304
- p. 305
- p. 306
- p. 307
- p. 308
- p. 309
- p. 310
- p. 311
- p. 312
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
FAQ
Is this audiobook really free?
Yes. "The Clevedon Case" 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.