| Hour | Title | Author | length |
|---|---|---|---|
| Midnight | The Over-Soul | Ralph Waldo Emerson | 50:05 |
| 1 AM | The Mystery of the Felwyn Tunnel | L.T. Meade & Robert Eustace | 46:03 |
| 2 AM | The Fullness of Life | Edith Wharton | 24:04 |
| 3 AM | On Scientific Method in Philosophy | Bertrand Russell | 58:49 |
| 4 AM | The Hotel Experience Of Mr Pink Fluker | Richard Malcolm Johnston | 30:07 |
| 5 AM | Frankenstein – Chapter 24 (end) | Mary W. Shelley | 61:24 |
| 6 AM | Bear Creek Collection Vol 2 – Conquerin’ Hero of the Humboldts | Robert E. Howard | 44:09 |
| 7 AM | American Notes – Chapter 14: Return to Cincinnati. A Stage-Coach Ride from that City to Columbus, and thence to Sandusky. So, by Lake Erie, to the Falls of Niagara | Charles Dickens | 40:19 |
| 8 AM | Sign of the Four ch 3-4 | Sir Arthur Conan Doyle | 35:54 |
| 9 AM | The Long Arm | Richard Harding Davis | 38:30 |
| 10 AM | Circumvented | Rina Ramsey | 24:30 |
| 11 AM | The Lot of the Schoolmaster | Stephen Leacock | 31:24 |
| Noon | The Mutability of Literature | Washington Irving | 28:46 |
| 1 PM | Frankenstein – Chapter 24 (end) | Mary W. Shelley | 61:24 |
| 2 PM | Bear Creek Collection Vol 2 – Conquerin’ Hero of the Humboldts | Robert E. Howard | 44:09 |
| 3 PM | American Notes – Chapter 14: Return to Cincinnati. A Stage-Coach Ride from that City to Columbus, and thence to Sandusky. So, by Lake Erie, to the Falls of Niagara | Charles Dickens | 40:19 |
| 4 PM | Sign of the Four ch 3-4 | Sir Arthur Conan Doyle | 35:54 |
| 5 PM | A Ride With A Mad Horse In A Freight-Car | W.H.H. Murray | 36:47 |
| 6 PM | What She Wore | Edna Ferber | 29:49 |
| 7 PM | The Griffin and the Minor Canon | Frank R. Stockton | 30:55 |
| 8 PM | Bear Creek Collection Vol 2 – Conquerin’ Hero of the Humboldts | Robert E. Howard | 44:09 |
| 9 PM | Frankenstein – Chapter 24 (end) | Mary W. Shelley | 61:24 |
| 10 PM | Sign of the Four ch 3-4 | Sir Arthur Conan Doyle | 35:54 |
| 11 PM | American Notes – Chapter 14: Return to Cincinnati. A Stage-Coach Ride from that City to Columbus, and thence to Sandusky. So, by Lake Erie, to the Falls of Niagara | Charles Dickens | 40:19 |