Old Time RadioAudiobookseBooks
Newsletter
eMailPreservation LibraryBargain Basement



Receive our newsletter!



CallFree audiobook downloadThe Cinnamon Bear
(Your shopping cart is empty)

 

Spider Audiobook # 53 The City of Lost Men - 5 hours [Download] #RA619D
The Spider Audiobook - # 53 The City of Lost Men
 

5 hours - Digital Download


Our Price: $9.99


Availability: Available for download now
Product Code: RA619D
Qty:

Description
 
The Spider #53 Audiobook
The City of Lost Men
by Wayne Rogers writing as Grant Stockbridge
Read by Nick Santa Maria
 
 
Over New York's Finest — the police organization without equal in the world — fell the blight of lunacy, sweeping on like wildfire until it had turned Manhattan into a chill, whimpering madhouse and released the helpless city's wealth to a wild carnival of crooks and vandals! What was that incredible, unseen force which, in a split-second, could transform sane men into drooling maniacs? No human being could stand against that Mask of Madness, and yet Richard Wentworth, in the Spider’s strange vestments, took up the fight — to strike blow for blow against the merciless emperor of idiocy who had captured a metropolis by addling its brains!
 
Spider author Norvell W. Page once described his hero in gigantic but unflinching terms: “His exploits had raised him to the proportions of a legendary hero. In ancient times, Rome would have made him an emperor-god. Salem might have burned him as a sorcerer. The modern world—well, the police had offered rewards totaling thousands of dollars for his capture ‘dead or alive.’ And the Underworld hated him and plotted his destruction with a fierceness bred of abject terror.
 
“Yes, Richard Wentworth was a murderer in the eyes of the law—a butcher who had slain a hundred, a thousand of his fellow men. They took no account of the fact he killed only those who richly deserved to die, that he alone had prevented a score of master criminals from overwhelming the forces of law and order.”
 
Nick Santa Maria reads this exciting suspense story of murder, mayhem and mystery that perfectly evokes 1938 Manhattan. The City of Lost Men originally published in The Spider magazine, February, 1938.
 
Chapter 1: Many Go Mad
Chapter 2: Death in the Night
Chapter 3: The Prosecution Closes
Chapter 4: Dance of Death
Chapter 5: Devil In a Murder Mask
Chapter 6: Closing Time for Corpses
Chapter 7: The Shadow of the Mask
Chapter 8: Machine-made Madness
Chapter 9: Gauntlet of Defiance
Chapter 10: Death Vault
Chapter 11: Vengeance of the Vigilantes!
Chapter 12: Behind the Mask
 

Nick Santa Maria Nick was born early in life in Brooklyn, NY. His theatrical background is based in Comedy Improv. He was a long standing member of the late lamented Miami based, Mental Floss, where he served as head writer/composer. From there he began his career in commercials, voice-overs, TV, Film, and theatre. He has performed in many roles on the stage including his award winning turn as Nick in Over The River And Through The WoodsI Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change, as Nathan Detroit in Guys and Dolls, in The 25th Annual Putnam Country Spelling Bee as Mr. Panch (3-D Theatricals), Mr. Bromhead in No Sex Please, We’re British at The Norris, and as Pseudolus in, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum at the Norris Theatre. Television: The Buffalo Bill ShowB.J. Stryker, and two Disney Christmas Specials. Off Broadway: Writer/Composer/Performer on Secrets Every Smart Traveler Should Know, Soundtrack on RCA Victor. Broadway: Vince Fontaine in Tommy Tune’s production of Grease. He also appeared in every domestic company of Mel Brooks’ The Producers, understudying everyone from Nathan Lane and Jason Alexander, to Tony Danza and David Hassellhoff. He was the original Genie in Disney’s Aladdin, a Musical Spectacular, soundtrack on Disney Records. Nick is a resident of Los Angeles and is currently writing a book about classic film comedians, Nick’s been a long time film historian, and has written several articles on the topic.

Average Customer Review: Average Customer Review: 5 of 5 5 of 5 Total Reviews: 1 Write a review

  0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
 
5 of 5 June 23, 2022
Reviewer: Joe Maavich from Rockford, IL United States  


Was this review helpful to you?

RadioArchives.com

 About Us
 Privacy Policy
 Send Us Feedback