
PART FIRST BROOMSEDGE
BARREN GROUND
PART SECOND PINE
PART THIRD LIFE-EVERLASTING
THE END
In a snow‑laden Virginia valley, a young woman in a bright orange shawl watches the desolate road from the window of Pedlar’s store. The narrative paints the land in meticulous detail—broomsedge turning from ivory to fire‑red as the sky shifts, fields scarred by war and a stubborn tenant system. The quiet of the empty station and the relentless wind stir a restless feeling that echoes through the hollow farms.
Against this stark backdrop, generations of yeoman farmers and displaced tenants cling to a fragile hope of renewal. The story follows the daily battles of those who try to coax life from exhausted soil, experimenting with new fertilizers while confronting relentless pests and the pull of the city. As the girl looks outward, the listener senses the tension between tradition and change, and the quiet courage it takes to survive in a place where the land itself seems to resist.
Language
en
Duration
~14 hours (841K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Laura Natal Rodrigues at Free Literature (Images generously made available by Hathi Trust Digital Library.)
Release date
2021-08-31
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1873–1945
A sharp-eyed chronicler of the American South, she wrote novels that pushed past nostalgia and looked closely at class, gender, and social change. Her fiction brought realism and wit to Virginia life, and it earned her the 1942 Pulitzer Prize for In This Our Life.
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