Paul and the Printing Press cover

Paul and the Printing Press

by Sara Ware Bassett

Listen Free

Free AI audiobook with natural voice. No signup required.

About This Book

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.

257

Chapters

~3084 min

Est. Listening Time

English

Language

4.0

Goodreads Rating

PAUL AND THE PRINTING PRESS

BY

SARA WARE BASSETT

WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY A. O. SCOTT

BOSTON LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY 1920

It gives me pleasure to acknowledge the kindness of Mr. Edwin A. Grozier, the Editor and Publisher of The Boston Post, and the courtesy of his employees who have offered me every assistance in the preparation of this manuscript.

CONTENTS

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

PAUL AND THE PRINTING PRESS

CHAPTER I

PAUL CAMERON HAS AN INSPIRATION

It was the vision of a monthly paper for the Burmingham High School that first turned Paul Cameron's attention toward a printing press.

"Dad, how much does a printing press cost?" he inquired one evening as he sat down to dinner.

"A what?"

"A printing press."

Mr. Cameron glanced up quizzically from the roast he was carving.

"Aren't you a trifle ambitious?"

Paul laughed.

"Perhaps I am," he admitted. "But I have often heard you say, 'Nothing venture, nothing have.'"

It was his father's turn to laugh.

"Yet why does your fancy take its flight toward a printing press?"

Eagerly Paul bent forward.

"Why you see, sir," he explained, "ever since I was chosen President of '20 I've wanted my class to be the finest the Burmingham High ever graduated. I want it to leave a record behind it, and do things no other class ever has. There has never been a school paper. They have them in other places. Why shouldn't we?"

Mr. Cameron was all attention now.

"We've plenty of talent," went on Paul with enthusiasm. "Even Mr. Calder, who is at the head of the English department, asserts that. Dick Rogers has had a poem printed in the town paper—"

He saw a twinkle light his father's eye.

"Maybe you'd just call it a verse," the boy smiled apologetically, "but up at school we call it a poem. It was about the war. And Eva Hardy has had an essay published somewhere and got two dollars for it."

"You don't say so!"

"Besides, there is lots of stuff about the football and hockey teams that we want to print—accounts of the games, and notices of the matches to be played. And the girls want to boom their Red Cross work and the fair they are going to have. There'd be plenty of material."

"Enough to fill a good-sized daily, I should think," remarked Mr. Cameron, chuckling.

Continue reading or listen to the full book Open in Reader →

How to Listen

  1. 1. Click "Listen Free" above
  2. 2. The book opens in CastReader's browser reader
  3. 3. Click the play button — AI narration starts with word highlighting
  4. 4. Use "Send to Phone" to continue listening on your phone

Frequently Asked Questions about “Paul and the Printing Press

Is "Paul and the Printing Press" free to read and listen to?

Yes. "Paul and the Printing Press" is a public domain work from Project Gutenberg. CastReader converts it to audio using AI text-to-speech — completely free, no account or payment needed.

Who wrote "Paul and the Printing Press"?

"Paul and the Printing Press" was written by Sara Ware Bassett.

How long does it take to listen to "Paul and the Printing Press"?

"Paul and the Printing Press" has 257 chapters. Estimated listening time is approximately 3084 minutes with CastReader's AI narration.

Can I listen to "Paul and the Printing Press" on my phone?

Yes. Open the book in CastReader's browser reader, then use "Send to Phone" to stream audio to your phone via Telegram. No app download needed.

What voice is used for the "Paul and the Printing Press" audiobook?

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.

Is there a human-narrated audiobook of "Paul and the Printing Press"?

"Paul and the Printing Press" is in the public domain, so human-narrated versions may exist on LibriVox or Audible. CastReader's AI narration is instant and free — no waiting or subscription required.